Due to their good corrosion resistance, copper and copper alloys such as 90:10 Cu-Ni are used extensively in high-quality marine and industrial piping systems and also in marine, urban, and industrial environments. Their corrosion loss and pitting behaviour tends to follow a bi-modal trend rather than the classic power law. Field data for 90:10 copper nickel immersed in natural seawater are used to explore the effect of water pollution and in particular the availability of critical nutrients for microbiologically induced corrosion. It is shown, qualitatively, that increased dissolved inorganic nitrogen increases corrosion predominantly in the second, long-term, mode of the model. Other, less pronounced, influences are salinity and dissolved oxygen concentration.
Funding
ARC
DP140103388
History
Journal title
Materials
Volume
8
Issue
12
Pagination
8047-8058
Publisher
MDPIAG
Language
en, English
College/Research Centre
Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment
School
Centre for Infrastructure, Performance and Reliability