February 15, 2024
Journal Article

Probing corrosion using a simple and versatile in situ multimodal corrosion measurement system

Abstract

In this work, we have developed a unique in situ multimodal corrosion system that is capable of acquiring electrochemical data, sample imaging/visualization, hydrogen collection, and applies desired potential when needed, simultaneously. Each of these modalities yield valuable information pertaining to the ongoing corrosion process. Combining them yields holistic information on the role of microstructure, processing history, presence of coatings, etc., on the sequence of steps occurring during the corrosion process, and how they correlate with the acquired electrochemical data. Four materials systems, namely AA6061-T6 aluminum alloy, AZ91 magnesium alloy, galvanized DP590 steel, and pure Zn, were investigated under open circuit, potentiodynamic polarization and accelerated conditions. The multimodal corrosion system was utilized to observe processes such as surface passivation and dissolution, pit and filiform corrosion initiation and propagation, and was correlated with location and magnitude of hydrogen evolution. This approach is shown to yield a truly multimodal understanding of the ongoing corrosion processes.

Published: February 15, 2024

Citation

Niverty S., R. Kalsar, R.J. Seffens, A.D. Guzman, T.J. Roosendaal, L.E. Strange, and V.V. Joshi. 2023. Probing corrosion using a simple and versatile in situ multimodal corrosion measurement system. Scientific Reports 13. PNNL-SA-185203. doi:10.1038/s41598-023-42249-0