Stress Corrosion Cracking of Copper–Nickel Alloys: A Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Corrosion of Cu-Ni Alloys
2.1. Basic Corrosion Mechanisms
- Cathodic
- Anodic
2.2. Effect of Environments
- Chlorine
- the adsorption of Cl− in the oxide layer will destroy its structure and integrity;
- Cl− may inhibit the formation or passivation of the surface oxide layer;
- Cl−-induced electric field will accelerate the dissolution of the substrate.
- Sulfide
- Ammonium
3. SCC Studies of Cu-Ni Alloys
3.1. SCC Testing Methods
3.1.1. Slow Strain Rate Test
3.1.2. Constant Loading Method
3.1.3. Constant Strain Method
3.2. SCC Performance
3.2.1. Sulfide
3.2.2. Ammonium
3.2.3. Sulfide + Ammonium−
3.2.4. Strain Rate
3.2.5. Temperature
3.3. SCC Mechanisms
4. Corrosion Cracking Mitigation
4.1. Inhibitors
4.2. Alloying Elements
4.3. Remove or Reduce the Stress Level
5. Summary and Future Directions
5.1. Summary
5.2. Future Directions
- Using advanced characterization techniques to characterize the structure degradation mechanisms at the atomic level, especially for the atoms at the crack tip.
- Enlarging the SCC testing environments. More testing factors, such as the presence of NO3− or other ions, a wider range of testing temperature, and flow conditions, should be taken into consideration during the SCC tests.
- Exploring other corrosion protection methods, such as coatings, to reduce SCC susceptibility. The related SCC mechanisms with coatings should also be illustrated. In addition, effective surface modification methods, such as laser processing [40], might also be used to inhibit the initiation of SCC cracks.
- Making modifications to the current operating practices and reducing the possibility of crack growth. In addition, finding effective methods to repair the existing cracks.
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. A Summary of the SCC of Cu-Ni Alloys in Different Environments
Year | Materials | Solution | Temperature | SCC Test Method | Time to Failure | Main Finding- | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1961 | Cu-Ni | seawater | - | - | - | Immune to SCC | [18] |
1968 | α Cu | Cu(NO3)2 | - | - | - | Susceptibility of Cu–Ni alloys to intergranular SCC in Cu(NO3)2 solutions. | [41] |
1973 | Cu-10Ni | moist NH3 | - | U-bend | 1000 h | Stress corrosion resistance was improved by solutionized Fe, but damaged by precipitation of Fe. | [35] |
1974 | Cu-Zn-Al | pure water/steam | 150–300 °C | - | 1000 h | Low-Zn alloys: intergranular SCC high-Zn: layer corrosion, immune to IGSCC. | [42] |
Cu-10Ni/30Ni | 300–350 °C | 500 h | Accelerated intergranular SCC due to the equilibrium grain boundary segregation of active metals. | ||||
Monel metal | 350 °C | No SCC (due to metallurgical factors and service duration). | |||||
1975 | 25 copper-base alloys | industrial and marine environments. | - | - | - | Only a few are susceptible to SCC | [19] |
1979 | - | - | - | SSRT | - | Strain rates between 10−7 and 10−5 s−1 promote SCC | [43] |
1987 | CuZn\CuZnMn\CuZnNi | PH4-14 Mattsson’s solution | RT | U-bend | - | Stress corrosion of copper alloys is controlled by anodic crack tip dissolution | [44] |
1991 | Cu-10Ni | Na2S | RT | SSRT | - | Cu-10Ni is susceptible to intergranular SCC in concentrated pure sulfide solutions, but not in dilute solutions | [22] |
1992 | Cu-10Ni, Cu-30Ni | chloride + sulfide | - | - | - | No SCC. The passive surface is responsible for the resistance to chloride and sulfide SCC. | [45] |
1994 | Cu-30Ni | NaCl + S2− | 25–70 °C | SSRT | - | The most severe SCC on a Cu-30Ni in seawater with 3120 ppm S2− at 25 °C. | [21] |
Cu-10Ni | SCC of Cu-10Ni is not affected by S2− or T. | ||||||
1997 | Cu-10Ni | NaCl + S2− | 20 °C | SSRT | 97 h for 100 ppm; ~41 h for 1000 ppm | Two SCC mechanisms: anodic dissolution-low c(S2−), hydrogen embrittlement-high c(S2−). | [16] |
2002 | Cu-5.37Ni | 5% NH3 | 26 ± 1 °C | SSRT | 16–17 days | Brittle transgranular SCC. MgCl2 is beneficial when low nickel copper alloys are exposed to ammonia. | [34] |
NaCl + NH3 + MgCl2 | 20–21 days | ||||||
air | 26 days | ||||||
2002 | Cu-5.37Ni | air | 28 ± 1 °C | SSRT | 24 days 18 h | NO SCC. | [46] |
NaCl + MgCl2 | 23 days 0 h | NH3 reacts directly with Cu and Ni resulting in blue–green complexes and shows corrosion-assisted failure. No clear evidence of SCC. | |||||
NaCl + MgCl2 + NH3 | 17 days 2 h | ||||||
2002 | Cu10Ni | NaCl + Na2S | 24 ± 1 °C | SSRT | 0.98/0.70 | Susceptible to SCC, mainly intergranular. Mechanism: sulfide stress corrosion cracking assisted with pitting corrosion for Cu10Ni at slip steps. | [47] |
2002 | 90Cu-10Ni | NaCl + S2− | 25/50/70 °C | SSRT | 40.8/27.8/25.0 h | The deterioration percentage of SCC of the Cu-10Ni specimen in polluted seawater was found to range between 19.6 and 39% (200 ppm, 70 °C) | [31] |
70Cu-30Ni | 95.3/73.1/74.2 h | 70Cu-30Ni -between 19.4 and 27.3% (1000 ppm, 50 °C; 3120 ppm, 70 °C) | |||||
2003 | Cu-5.37% Ni | 3.5 wt.% NaCl + 10.0 wt.% MgCl2 + 1.0 wt.% NH3 | 28 ± 1 °C | SSRT | 62.93 h | 1. With NH3, failure changed from ductile to brittle intergranular SCC. 2. Inhibition of SCC by MgCl2. | [33] |
2003 | Cu-5.37Ni | air/5/10% NH3 | 28 + 1 °C | SSRT | 75.54/57.26/52.14 h | Intergranular SCC was observed to occur below the elastic limit in the presence of the superimposed cyclic stress, which propagates by transgranular SCC mechanism. | [25] |
2004 | CuAl9Ni3Fe2 | sea water | - | SSRT | Cross-section reduced by 20% in 3 weeks | Intergranular crack; second phases play a key role. | [48] |
2005 | Cu-Ni-Al-Mn-Nb | NaCl + acetic acid + hydrogen sulfide | 82 °C | SSRT | 720 h | Brittle intergranular failure. With Ni up to 25%, it is resistant to hydrogen embrittlement, sulfide stress corrosion, and stress corrosion in NH3. | [49] |
MTA150 (Cu-Ni14.9-Sn7.9-C72900) | 180 h | Susceptibility to stress corrosion; brittle intergranular fracture | |||||
2005 | Cu-5.37%Ni | NH3/NH3 + NaCl/NH3 + NaCl + MaCl2 | 28 ± 3 °C | SSRT | 57.26/57.37/62.73 h | Brittle SCC failures. Superimposed cyclic stresses on prestressed specimens accelerate the stress corrosion failures in an ammoniacal environment. | [27] |
2005 | Cu-5.37%Ni | 10% NH3 + x% MgCl2 | 28 ± 3 °C | SSRT | 40.91–97.58 h | Intergranular SCC. Beyond 7.5% MgCl2 completely restores the ductility loss that was observed under the influence of ammonia alone. | [28] |
2006 | Cu-10Ni | wet H2S | 35–120 °C | - | - | The failure of a Cu-10Ni bundle used in the overhead condenser of a steam cracker unit was attributed to intergranular SCC caused by wet H2S condensed in the overhead column. | [50] |
2007 | UNS C72900 | ISO 15156-3 [51] | RT | - | 30 days | Cold-worked and hardened UNS C72900 is more prone to SSC and SCC than hot-worked and hardened, and exhibited intergranular fracture with transgranular branching. | [52] |
2007 | Cu-30Ni | 18% monoethanolamine (MEA) | 60/90 °C | constantextension rate test (CERT) technique | 81/65 h | Susceptible to transgranular SCC in the 90 °C aerated MEA solution of pH 9. Cracking mechanism: stress-assisted dissolution of copper from the alloy matrix. | [32] |
2009 | Cu-10Ni | 7.5% NH3/Na2S | RT | SSRT | 67.57 h/26.12 h | Crack propagation depends on the concentration and the exposure to the environment post-crack initiation. Better SCC resistance due to higher Ni. | [9] |
2011 | Cu-10Ni | NaCl + S2− | RT | 5.0 × 10−6s−1 | 397 min | S2− increases the susceptibility of brittle transgranular SCC at different strain rates. | [30] |
NaCl + S2− + glycine | 420 min | Glycine is a great SCC inhibitor. Surface adsorption inhibits anodic dissolution | |||||
NaCl + S2− + glycine + KI | 430 min | Synergistic effect of KI and glycine improves SCC resistance in sulfide-polluted saltwater | |||||
2011 | Cupronickel | NH3/S2− | - | - | - | 1. Ni in Cu enhances the SCC resistance, while Zn decreases it. 2. Two SCC mechanisms: Passive-film rupture and de-alloying. 3. Mitigate the SCC: heat treatment and inhibitors. | [8] |
2013 | C70600\C76400 | - | - | ISO 6957 [53] | 1 year | NO SCC. Corrosion rates under tensile timevarying load is 39% higher than untensioned fixed configuration. | [4] |
2018 | CuNiSn | sour H2S | 150 ± 5 °C | 4PB | 720 h | SCC: cracks up to 3 mm deep, severe depletion of Cu close to the cracks due to selective corrosion | [54] |
simulated seawater | NO HSC. | ||||||
2019 | KS C1220, UNS C12200 | heating water supply system of a residential building | 10 °C | U-bolt | - | Susceptible to SCC and exhibits 4-stage fracture process. | [55] |
2021 | Cu-27%Ni | Mattsson’s solution | - | SSRT | 2301/7037 sec without/with BTA | 1. BTA as a SCC inhibitor by forming a protective surface film. 2. Crack propagation regime is controlled by the BTA concentration. 3. Fracture type changes from intergranular brittle to ductile. | [26] |
2021 | Cu-10Ni (UNS C70600) | 10% NH3/10% Na2S/mixture of both | RT | C-ring | 15 days | 1. In the incubation stage of SCC with slip dissolution mechanism accompanied by pitting and intergranular corrosion. 2. No well-defined effect of tensile stress on the corrosion rate. | [29] |
2023 | Cu-30Ni | NH3 | 65 ± 0.2℃ | C-rings | 7 days | 1. NH4+/stress increases the depth and diameter of the pits and the number of pits in the specimens. 2. Pitting is the synergistic effect of stress and NH4+. | [13] |
2023 | Phosphorus deoxidized copper | 3.5 wt%NaCl | RT | SSRT | 2 days (BJ)/4.5 days (MJ) | Worse SCC and poorer fracture toughness on Brazed joint (BJ) than mechanical joint (MJ) due to a brittle surface copper oxide layer | [17] |
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Cu | Ni | Fe | Mn | Sn | C | Pb | S | Zn | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cu-10Ni | Bal. | 9.0–11.0 | 1.2–2.0 | 0.5–1.0 | <0.02 | <0.05 | <0.03 | <0.05 | <0.5 |
Cu-90Ni | Bal. | 29.0–32.0 | 0.4–1.0 | 0.5–1.5 | <0.02 | <0.06 | <0.03 | <0.06 | <0.5 |
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Li, D.; Li, K.; Gao, J.; Liu, Y.; Qin, C.; Li, J.; Li, Y.; Cao, W.; Zhai, Y.; Huang, G. Stress Corrosion Cracking of Copper–Nickel Alloys: A Review. Coatings 2023, 13, 1690. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings13101690
Li D, Li K, Gao J, Liu Y, Qin C, Li J, Li Y, Cao W, Zhai Y, Huang G. Stress Corrosion Cracking of Copper–Nickel Alloys: A Review. Coatings. 2023; 13(10):1690. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings13101690
Chicago/Turabian StyleLi, Dandan, Kaiyang Li, Jiajie Gao, Yunfeng Liu, Chao Qin, Jianfeng Li, Yongshuai Li, Wei Cao, Yunlong Zhai, and Guojie Huang. 2023. "Stress Corrosion Cracking of Copper–Nickel Alloys: A Review" Coatings 13, no. 10: 1690. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings13101690
APA StyleLi, D., Li, K., Gao, J., Liu, Y., Qin, C., Li, J., Li, Y., Cao, W., Zhai, Y., & Huang, G. (2023). Stress Corrosion Cracking of Copper–Nickel Alloys: A Review. Coatings, 13(10), 1690. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings13101690