Corrosion Science and Technology (Materials Science & Technology)

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The Talbot's go where Mars Fontana doesn't... This book is not for the person that may be intimidated by material science! A thorough discussion on the thermodynamic aspects yields an in-depth understanding of the Pourbaix diagrams, while the kinetic discussions go well beyond Faraday's Law. Chapters dedicated to specific industries (aviation, automotive, food processing, and building construction) provide additional insight into practical corrosion issues. Despite the highly-theoretical treatment of most corrosion mechanisms, cathodic protection methods are not given adequate coverage for problem solving.

Author(s): David Talbot, James Talbot
Series: Materials Science & Technology
Edition: 1
Publisher: CRC-Press
Year: 1997

Language: English
Commentary: +OCR
Pages: 390

CORROSION SCIENCE and TECHNOLOGY......Page 3
Contents......Page 5
Preface......Page 12
The Authors......Page 14
Acknowledgments......Page 15
1.1.1 Corrosion as a System Characteristic......Page 16
1.1.2 The Electrochemical Origin of Corrosion......Page 17
1.1.3 Stimulated Local Corrosion......Page 18
1.2.1 Protective Oxides......Page 19
1.4.1 Passivity......Page 20
1.4.3 Cathodic Protection......Page 21
1.4.6 Criteria for Corrosion Failure......Page 22
1.4.7 Material Selection......Page 23
1.5.1 Ions and Ionic Equations......Page 25
1.5.2 Partial Reactions......Page 26
Active Dissolution of Iron with Oxygen Absorption......Page 27
Passivity of Iron in Alkaline Water......Page 28
Further Reading......Page 29
2.1 Origins and Characteristics of Structure......Page 30
2.2.1 The Nature of Water......Page 42
2.3 The Structures of Metal Oxides......Page 58
2.3.1 Electronegativity......Page 59
2.4 The Structures of Metals......Page 74
2.4.4 Structural Artifacts Introduced During Manufacture......Page 82
Further Reading......Page 84
3.1 Thermodynamics of Aqueous Corrosion......Page 85
4.1 Galvanic Stimulation......Page 168
5.1 Stress-Corrosion Cracking (SCC)......Page 181
6.1 Surface Preparation......Page 196
7.1 Iron and Steel Structures......Page 238
8 - Stainless Steels......Page 263
8.1 Phase Equilibria......Page 264
9.1 Summary of Physical Metallurgy of Some Standard Alloys......Page 297
10 - Corrosion and Corrosion Control in Aviation......Page 318
10.1 Airframes......Page 319
11.1 Overview......Page 335
12.1 General Considerations......Page 347
13.1 Introduction......Page 373