Chapter 5-Metal Alloys
Chapter 5-Metal Alloys
Chapter 5-Metal Alloys
Rebar corrosion
in concrete
OVERVIEW OF CAST IRON
d Liquid
g+ L
L + Fe3C
Austenite
Carbon
910˚C Steel Cast Iron
g + Fe3C
a+g
723˚C
a a + Fe3C
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GREY CAST IRON
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MICROSTRUCTURE
Graphite spheres
surrounded by ferrite
Usually some pearlite
May be some cementite
Can be hardened to
martensite by heat
treatment
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PROPERTIES
17
APPLICATIONS
18
MALLEABLE CAST IRON
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MICROSTRUCTURE
20
PROPERTIES
21
APPLICATIONS
22
WHITE CAST IRON
Used in
Aerospace parts
Racing cars, motorcycles and bicycles
Pipework and heat exchangers in chemical plants and oil
installations.
Titanium heat-
exchangers
WHAT IS CORROSION?
Why is it a problem?
Financial - $350 Billion Dollar Annual Problem in U.S.
(4.25% of GNP) Department of Defense spends $6 –
8 Billion
RECIPE FOR
CORROSION
Active metal
Water
Oxygen
(atmospheric
corrosion)
Acid
(chemical
corrosion)
Salt
High
temperature
Electrochemical Corrosion
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©2003 Brooks/Cole, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under license.
Figure 22.4 The anode and cathode reactions in typical electrolytic corrosion cells: (a)
the hydrogen electrode, (b) the oxygen electrode, and (c) the water electrode.
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T YPES OF CORROSION
:
Corrosion is the primary means by which
metals deteriorate. Most metals corrode on
contact with water (and moisture in the air),
acids, bases, salts, aggressive metal polishes,
and other solid and liquid chemicals. Metals
will also corrode when exposed to gaseous
materials like acid vapors, formaldehyde gas,
ammonia gas, and sulfur containing gases.
Corrosion Mechanism :
Corrosion Mechanism is the destructive
attack, or deterioration, of a metal by
chemical or electrochemical reaction with its
environment. Corrosive attack of metals is an
electrochemical process. In a galvanic cell,
two dissimilar metals (e.g., iron and copper)
are placed in electrical contact in the
presence of oxygen and moisture. Separate
chemical reactions take place at the surfaces
of the two metals, creating a flow of electrons
through the connecting wire.
Uniform Corrosion
UNIFORM CORROSION
Bracket easier
to replace than
pipe!
SURFACE TREATMENT (COATINGS)
Organic paints
Chromating and phosphating:
The Process - chromating and phosphating are surface-coating processes that enhance the
corrosion resistance of metals. Both involve soaking the component in a heated bath based on
chromic or phosphoric acids. The acid reacts with the surface, dissolving some of the surface
metal and depositing a thin protective layer of complex chromium or phosphorous compounds
Bluing
Bl uing is a passivation process in which steel is partially protected against rust, and is named after the
blue-black appearance of the resulting protective finish. True gun bluing is an electrochemical
conversion coating resulting from an oxidizing chemical reaction with iron on the surface selectively
forming magnetite (Fe 3 O 4 ), the black oxide of iron, which occupies the same volume as normal iron.
Done for bolts called “blackening ”