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Dissolved-oxygen reduction curve active-passive oxidation

In the presence of oxidizing species (such as dissolved oxygen), some metals and alloys spontaneously passivate and thus exhibit no active region in the polarization curve, as shown in Fig. 6. The oxidizer adds an additional cathodic reaction to the Evans diagram and causes the intersection of the total anodic and total cathodic lines to occur in the passive region (i.e., Ecmi is above Ew). The polarization curve shows none of the characteristics of an active-passive transition. The open circuit dissolution rate under these conditions is the passive current density, which is often on the order of 0.1 j.A/cm2 or less. The increased costs involved in using CRAs can be justified by their low dissolution rate under such oxidizing conditions. A comparison of dissolution rates for a material with the same anodic Tafel slope, E0, and i0 demonstrates a reduction in corrosion rate... [Pg.62]


See other pages where Dissolved-oxygen reduction curve active-passive oxidation is mentioned: [Pg.238]    [Pg.486]    [Pg.145]    [Pg.1600]    [Pg.563]    [Pg.486]    [Pg.317]   


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Activated oxidation

Activated oxygen

Activation oxidation

Active oxides

Active oxygen

Active-passive

Activity oxidation

Activity reduction

Dissolved oxygen

Dissolved-oxygen reduction curve

Oxidation oxygen activation

Oxidative activation

Oxides activated

Oxidizing activators

Oxygen activation

Oxygen activators

Oxygen reduction

Oxygen reduction oxides

Oxygen, reductive activation

Oxygenates reduction

Passivating oxide

Passivators oxygen

Passive oxidation

Reduction activated

Reduction activation

Reduction oxygenation

Reductive activation

Reductive oxygenation

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