Corrosion Hazards in Urban Infrastructure Structures Using the Example of the Al Bayt Stadium in Katar
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (1)
- Increase awareness of high corrosion costs and potential savings;
- (2)
- Change the misconception that nothing can be done about corrosion;
- (3)
- Change policies, regulations, standards, and management practices to increase corrosion cost-savings through sound corrosion management;
- (4)
- Advance design practices for better corrosion management;
- (5)
- Advance life prediction and performance assessment methods;
- (6)
- Advance corrosion technology through research, development, and updating;
- (7)
- Improve education and training of staff in recognition of corrosion control.
2. Corrosion Problems on Al-Bayt Stadium
2.1. Material Solutions in the Stadium
2.2. Description of the Corrosion Phenomena in the Stadium
3. Discussion of the Design Mistakes and of the Causes of Damages
- (a)
- The object is composed of a chain of different stainless steels of different compositions and structures with obvious differences in behavior in terms of corrosion [5,12]: AISI 316 steel is the noblest one and acts as a cathode compared to AISI 303 steel, which is not recommended for use in highly corrosive environments due to the presence of sulfur in the composition.
- (b)
- The electrochemical corrosion due to the presence of a galvanic chain of different corrosion potentials of the differently “noble” components might have been minimized by the peculiar property of stainless steels to be “passivable alloys”: the main feature of all stainless steels is that they are suitable for building a nanometric surface layer consisting mainly of chromium oxide, named the passive layer. It is self-healing, and the rate of restoring passivity after damage is a feature of the quality of the alloy. Thus, the stability of the passive film is the result of a compromise between two kinetic processes: film growth and film dissolution [17]. Moreover, the surface stationary electrochemical conditions are driven mainly by adsorption/desorption equilibria of external substances rather than via redox electrochemical reactions, the reason why for passive stainless steels an electrochemical corrosion potential does not exist. In the active state, on the other hand, stainless steels have an often higher corrosion rate than carbon steels. Nevertheless, heat treatments, mechanical working, and handling produce many surface defects, hence reducing the corrosion resistance of the passive layer. To increase and optimize the formation of the chromium oxide layer, it is necessary to perform a repassivation procedure. The immersion of stainless steel in an acid bath dissolves free iron or other foreign substances from the surface while leaving the chromium intact, according to ASTM380 [18]. The acid chemically removes the free iron, leaving behind a uniform surface with a higher proportion of chromium than the underlying material [19]. This treatment was not performed on the structure. In our case, the AISI 303 s.s, both for the galvanic coupling and for the poor finish, is subject to widespread pitting.
- (c)
- Poor surface finishing is the third construction mistake. Both reliability and durability of the passive layer are strictly connected with the smoothness of the surface; it is not obviously possible to reach a perfectly planar surface, and at the crystallographic level, all surfaces are rough. Hence, passivity is a dynamic situation where activation phenomena happen in a very high number of sites, quickly followed by repassivation. The speed of reestablishing passivity is a function of both surface uniformity and quality. All functional accessories of the actuator (the colored parts of Figure 4) have been produced in the mechanical workshop leaving the degree of finish produced by the tool. However, this roughness deviation from the optimum could have been minimized by a suitable repassivation process.
- (d)
- All edges should be rounded, not only to allow more uniform distribution of possible coatings but also to avoid the accumulation of current density on sharp edges, enhancing both localized rust and pitting, as clearly shown in Figure 7.
- (e)
- Moreover, the designer coated the cast iron and SS355JO steel components, which are anodic, to both the joined S.S. and the bronze bearings: huge cathode, small anode, high corrosion current density through the pores of the paint (see the archetypic example of such a mistake in the book: Corrosion Engineering, by M. Fontana, N. Green) [20].
4. Solutions to Reduce Further Corrosion
- -
- Disassembly of the snap ring;
- -
- Cleaning the seat and adjacent areas with a bronze brush;
- -
- Spraying of the entire surface area of the roller;
- -
- Spraying or immersion of the snap ring;
- -
- Assembly of the snap ring.
5. Conclusive Remark
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Krolikowska, A.; Bonora, P.L. Corrosion Hazards in Urban Infrastructure Structures Using the Example of the Al Bayt Stadium in Katar. Coatings 2023, 13, 1443. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings13081443
Krolikowska A, Bonora PL. Corrosion Hazards in Urban Infrastructure Structures Using the Example of the Al Bayt Stadium in Katar. Coatings. 2023; 13(8):1443. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings13081443
Chicago/Turabian StyleKrolikowska, Agnieszka, and Pier Luigi Bonora. 2023. "Corrosion Hazards in Urban Infrastructure Structures Using the Example of the Al Bayt Stadium in Katar" Coatings 13, no. 8: 1443. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings13081443
APA StyleKrolikowska, A., & Bonora, P. L. (2023). Corrosion Hazards in Urban Infrastructure Structures Using the Example of the Al Bayt Stadium in Katar. Coatings, 13(8), 1443. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings13081443