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Relationship of pH to Aerobic Corrosion Fatigue Life of Steel

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Abstract

IT is often of some importance, as in marine service and in the petroleum industry, to know how various pH levels affect the room temperature corrosion fatigue life of a steel. We have performed a statistical-type, R. R. Moore machine, fatigue study of a normalized-only A.I.S.I. 1036 steel with the results shown in Fig. 1. The tensile strength was 100,000 p.s.i. ; the yield strength was 68,400 p.s.i. ; and the per cent elongation (2 in.) was 30 per cent. A 3 per cent sodium chloride solution was used, this with a shaped capillary film glass feeder system. One curve was determined with a sodiumhydroxide-saturated, 3 per cent sodium chloride solution. Etching (Fig. 2) was observed therein—no caustic embrittlement whatever was noted.

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References

  1. Whitman, W. G., Russell, R. P., and Davis, G. H. B., J. Amer. Chem., Soc., 47, 70 (1925).

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RADD, F., CROWDER, L. & WOLFE, L. Relationship of pH to Aerobic Corrosion Fatigue Life of Steel. Nature 184, 2008–2009 (1959). https://doi.org/10.1038/1842008a0

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