Effect of various dissolved species on anaerobic iron corrosion

Iron corrosion is an extremely complicated process because numerous factors such as pH, DO, temperature, inhibitor, and other various constituents in water can exert a controlling influence. The economic importance of problems that are caused by corrosion has been recognized. Therefore, the necessi...

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Main Author: Lee, Changmin
Other Authors: Environmental Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/43875
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07232004-161457/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-438752020-09-29T05:45:23Z Effect of various dissolved species on anaerobic iron corrosion Lee, Changmin Environmental Engineering Edwards, Marc A. Dietrich, Andrea M. Vikesland, Peter J. Anaerobic corrosion Phosphorus species Hydrogen evolution Phosphine Sulfide Iron corrosion is an extremely complicated process because numerous factors such as pH, DO, temperature, inhibitor, and other various constituents in water can exert a controlling influence. The economic importance of problems that are caused by corrosion has been recognized. Therefore, the necessity of better understanding corrosion phenomenon is apparent. The effect of phosphorus, especially in oxidation states different than phosphate (+V) (e.g., PO3-3, PO2-3 and PH3 gas), on anaerobic iron corrosion was examined. Tests were conducted at pH 3, 7, and 10- 11 in a solution of 10-3 M NaCl. There was not a significant catalytic effect of phosphorus species on anaerobic iron corrosion. Higher levels of PH3 did markedly increase H2 evolution, consistent with observations of other researchers, but it is possibly due to oxidation of PH3 by iron surfaces with production of H2. Various constituents were also tested for iron corrosion in anaerobic solution [Al3+ (soluble), Al(OH)3, Cu2+, Si(OH)4, Boron, NOM, and sulfide] at pH pH 3, 7, and 10-11. None of these appeared to inhibit corrosion compared to a control. At pH 7, soluble Al3+ and Cu2+ in solution led to much higher production of H2 relative to a control. Phosphorus species had little impact on iron corrosion rates in the presence of sulfides (198 mg/L as S2-). In much of the research, recovery of H2 in the headspace was much lower than was predicated based on classic equations. This implies that some other, and as yet unappreciated, reactions are occurring in this system. However, in other instances the recovery of hydrogen was consistent with classical theory. Future work should examine the circumstances in which agreements and disagreements with classic theory occur. Master of Science 2014-03-14T21:41:06Z 2014-03-14T21:41:06Z 2004-07-14 2004-07-23 2004-12-22 2004-12-22 Thesis etd-07232004-161457 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/43875 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07232004-161457/ EffectofVariousDissolvedSpeciesonAnaerobicIronCorrosion.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Anaerobic corrosion
Phosphorus species
Hydrogen evolution
Phosphine
Sulfide
spellingShingle Anaerobic corrosion
Phosphorus species
Hydrogen evolution
Phosphine
Sulfide
Lee, Changmin
Effect of various dissolved species on anaerobic iron corrosion
description Iron corrosion is an extremely complicated process because numerous factors such as pH, DO, temperature, inhibitor, and other various constituents in water can exert a controlling influence. The economic importance of problems that are caused by corrosion has been recognized. Therefore, the necessity of better understanding corrosion phenomenon is apparent. The effect of phosphorus, especially in oxidation states different than phosphate (+V) (e.g., PO3-3, PO2-3 and PH3 gas), on anaerobic iron corrosion was examined. Tests were conducted at pH 3, 7, and 10- 11 in a solution of 10-3 M NaCl. There was not a significant catalytic effect of phosphorus species on anaerobic iron corrosion. Higher levels of PH3 did markedly increase H2 evolution, consistent with observations of other researchers, but it is possibly due to oxidation of PH3 by iron surfaces with production of H2. Various constituents were also tested for iron corrosion in anaerobic solution [Al3+ (soluble), Al(OH)3, Cu2+, Si(OH)4, Boron, NOM, and sulfide] at pH pH 3, 7, and 10-11. None of these appeared to inhibit corrosion compared to a control. At pH 7, soluble Al3+ and Cu2+ in solution led to much higher production of H2 relative to a control. Phosphorus species had little impact on iron corrosion rates in the presence of sulfides (198 mg/L as S2-). In much of the research, recovery of H2 in the headspace was much lower than was predicated based on classic equations. This implies that some other, and as yet unappreciated, reactions are occurring in this system. However, in other instances the recovery of hydrogen was consistent with classical theory. Future work should examine the circumstances in which agreements and disagreements with classic theory occur. === Master of Science
author2 Environmental Engineering
author_facet Environmental Engineering
Lee, Changmin
author Lee, Changmin
author_sort Lee, Changmin
title Effect of various dissolved species on anaerobic iron corrosion
title_short Effect of various dissolved species on anaerobic iron corrosion
title_full Effect of various dissolved species on anaerobic iron corrosion
title_fullStr Effect of various dissolved species on anaerobic iron corrosion
title_full_unstemmed Effect of various dissolved species on anaerobic iron corrosion
title_sort effect of various dissolved species on anaerobic iron corrosion
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/43875
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07232004-161457/
work_keys_str_mv AT leechangmin effectofvariousdissolvedspeciesonanaerobicironcorrosion
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