Gang Qia,
Yanli Dongb,
Yongxiang Fenga,
Jianjian Weia,
Pengju Hana,
Xiaohong Baia and
Bin He*a
aCollege of Civil Engineering, Taiyuan University of Technology, Taiyuan 030024, P. R. China. E-mail: hebin@tyut.edu.cn
bCivil Engineering School of Environment and Safety Engineering, North University of China, No. 3 Xueyuan Road, Taiyuan 030051, Shanxi, P. R. China
First published on 10th October 2022
In this experiment, Q235 and X80 carbon steels, which are widely used in oil and gas pipelines and ancillary facilities, were selected to study the changes in the corrosion behaviour and mechanism of carbon steels in the process of natural saline soil cooling to a freezing state through electrochemical testing. The equivalent circuit model of carbon steel before and after the freezing phase transformation in the soil was determined. Based on the corrosion kinetic parameters and soil thermodynamic changes, the influencing factors of steel corrosion during the cooling process were systematically analysed. It was found that temperature mainly affected carbon steel corrosion by changing the properties of the solution. The main factors affecting the corrosion behaviour of the carbon steel were the thermal motion of molecules, ions, and electrons in solution, oxygen dissolution and diffusion, ion adsorption, diffusion mass transfer, and unfrozen water content change during the cooling process.
A large number of studies have been reported on the cooling process of saline soil, mainly focusing on freezing temperature, phase transition, deformation characteristics, unfrozen water content, salt migration, water migration, and the dielectric properties of saline soil at low temperatures. The freezing temperature and unfrozen water content of saline soil are sensitive to factors such as water activity, pore size, salt content, and solid–liquid interface energy.1–3 High water activity, small pore size, high salt content, and high solid–liquid interface energy will significantly reduce the freezing temperature and increase the unfrozen water content in saline soil.4–6 During the freezing process, the water and salt in saline soil undergo a phase transition. Considering the phase transition of ice and salt, the heat transfer equation can be calculated, and the variation of ice porosity, salt crystal porosity, and unfrozen water content can then be calculated by discretisation.7,8 At the same time, the deformation of saline soil can also be explained by the phase transition model of saline soil.9 Based on the differences in the water content, salt content, and salt type of saline soil, saline soil deforms to varying degrees during the freezing process.10 Soils that contain sulphate crystals are generally more prone to deformation when they freeze.11,12 The freezing of saline soil is usually accompanied by the migration of soil water and salt. Specifically, the water and salt in the soil migrate under the action of temperature potential, gravity potential, and concentration gradient,13 and the migration of saline soil is mainly affected by the concentration gradient.14 With changing temperature, the apparent dielectric constant and bulk conductivity of soil significantly change.15 Multiple factors such as water activity, unfrozen water content, and salt and water migration all affect the dielectric properties of soil.16,17
Some scholars have studied the influence of temperature on the corrosion of carbon steel in saline soil,18–20 but few scholars have studied the change in carbon steel corrosion behaviour during the cooling process of natural saline soil. Therefore, Dingbian County, Shaanxi Province, China was selected as the research background for this work, and the saline soil used in the experiment reported herein was taken from this location. Dingbian County is rich in oil and gas resources, including Changqing Oilfield, which is the largest oil field in China. Moreover, the first line project of West-East gas transmission transits Dingbian County, and wind power generation in this county is nearly 4000 Mw. This area contains seasonal frozen soil areas, with a historical maximum frost depth of 133 cm and an average frozen depth of 99 cm. Therefore, studying the corrosion change of carbon steel during the soil cooling process under the unique soil environment, climate conditions, and resource background conditions of this county is highly desirable. The steel types selected in this test were Q235B and API X80 because they are widely used in buried pipelines, energy storage facilities, and photovoltaic projects, and they have high reference values.
In this experiment, an electrochemical test method was used to study the change of carbon steel corrosion behaviour during the cooling process in the saline soil environment. The mechanism of the corrosion behaviour change of carbon steel was mainly explained by analysing the changes in the soil environment caused by temperature change. The mechanism of corrosion behaviour change was systematically analysed from two aspects of carbon steel corrosion: kinetic parameters and soil thermodynamic changes. This work provides a reference for studying the corrosion and practical engineering of carbon steel in similar environments.
C | Si | Mn | P | S | V | Nb | Ti | Cr | Mo | Al | Cu | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Q235 | 0.19 | 0.105 | 0.145 | 0.02 | 0.02 | — | — | — | — | — | 0.008 | — |
X80 | 0.09 | 0.35 | 1.9 | 0.03 | ≤0.01 | 0.06 | 0.065 | 0.016 | 0.03 | 0.21 | 0.05 | — |
Steel | Tensile strength (MPa) | Yield strength (MPa) | Elongation (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Q235 | 488 | 356 | 36.5 |
X80 | 551 | 625 | 40 |
Liquid limit (%) | Plastic limit | Plasticity index | Moisture content (%) | Salt content (%) | pH |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
23.8 | 15 | 8.8 | 18.18 | 1.3 | 8.4 |
Fig. 4 Open circuit potential curves of Q235 and X80 steels in various temperatures. (a) Q235, (b) X80. |
Fig. 5 and 6 show the EIS curves of Q235 steel and X80 steel at different temperatures. All the EIS curves were divided into three parts: high (104 to 105 Hz), mid-low (10° to 102 Hz), and low frequency (10−1 to 10° Hz). The Nyquist curves of the two steels showed the same variation with decreasing temperature. Their high-frequency components shifted to the right, and the amplitude of this rightward shift gradually increased with decreasing temperature. Meanwhile, the radius of the capacitive reactance arc in the mid-low frequency range gradually increased with decreasing temperature. The curvature of the low-frequency capacitive reactance arcs gradually increased with decreasing temperature, becoming approximately linear at −10 °C. These changes indicate that the impedance of the soil structure and the impedance of the corrosion reaction zone increased with decreasing temperature in the corrosion regime and that this process was accompanied by a change in the velocity control step.
Fig. 5 EIS curves of Q235 steel at different temperatures. (a) Nyquist curves. (b) Impedance phase-frequency curves. (c) Impedance modulus-frequency curves. |
Fig. 5b and6b show the impedance phase-frequency (IP-logF) curves of the steel specimens. These IP-logF curves reflect the response process (relaxation process) of the corrosion system to disturbances. The relaxation constant τ = 1/ω* is commonly used to describe the speed of this process, where τ is the relaxation constant and ω* is the characteristic frequency of the sub-process when the relaxation occurs.23 Two time constants of the corrosion process were observed. The first time constant τ1 corresponded to the relaxation process of the rust-soil solution interface (high frequency), and the second time constant τ2 corresponded to the relaxation process of the rust-substrate interface (low frequency). And mass transfer process. The magnitude of τ2 directly reflects the total reaction rate of the electrode interface, and the magnitude of the total reaction rate reflects the corrosion rate. As the ambient temperature decreased, the IP-logF curves of the two steels shifted in the low-frequency direction, and this decrease in characteristic frequency led to an increase in the relaxation time constant. The increase in τ1 indicates that the dielectric capacity of the rust-soil solution interface was weakened, and the increase in τ2 indicates that the charge transfer and ion adsorption and diffusion in the rust-substrate interface were slowed down. The trend of the reaction rate at the interface was visualised by plotting the curves (Fig. 7). This demonstrated that the value of tended to slowly decrease with decreasing temperature, implying that the time required to complete the reaction at the electrode interface increased with decreasing temperature. Thus, the corrosion process slowed down.
Fig. 6 EIS curves of X80 steel at different temperatures. (a) Nyquist curves. (b) Impedance phase-frequency curves. (c) Impedance modulus-frequency curves. |
Fig. 7 Trend of the characteristic frequency of the second time constant with decreasing temperature. |
Fig. 5c and 6c show the impedance modulus-frequency (IM-logF) curves of the steel specimens. The IM-logF curves of the two steels shifted in the direction of increasing modulus with decreasing temperature across the whole frequency range. At the same time, the increase in impedance modulus accelerated as the frequency decreased, with a very large increase in the 10−1 to 101 Hz range.
The EIS curves at −5 °C and −10 °C were significantly different from those at other ambient temperatures. These temperatures achieved extremely large curvature radii in the low-frequency bands of their Nyquist curves, significantly larger phase values in the high-frequency bands of their IP-logF curves, and more drastic changes in the low-frequency bands of their IM-logF curves. Temperature changes affect the kinetic process and thermodynamic process of the irreversible electrode reactions in corrosion systems. The EIS curves were analysed by their equivalent circuits (ECs) to investigate the changes in the corrosion process.
The EC1 of the two different steels at 20, 10, 0, and −5 °C was (Cr-s(Rr-s(CpRp)(Cdl(Rr(CPERct))), and the EC2 at −10 °C was (Cr-sRr-s)(Cdl(Rr(CPE(RctW)))). The corrosion system and equivalent circuit are schematically shown in Fig. 8. Both EC1 and EC2 contained relaxation process of the two corrosion sub-processes, corresponding to the two time constants of the EIS. The Cr-s and Rr-s in EC distributions represent the capacitance and resistance of the rust-substrate interface. The Cp and Rp distributions represent the capacitance and resistance of pore solution. Cdl represents the electric double layer capacitance formed by the rust-substrate interface. Rr represent the resistance of the rust layer. The CPE electrode was used to represent the capacitance of the corrosion reaction zone due to the surface inhomogeneity of the solid electrode and the porous nature of the soil, which led to a dispersion effect. Rct represents the charge transfer resistance, and W represents the Warburg impedance. The black fitted EIS curves using the ECs are shown in Fig. 5 and 6. The fitted curves were in very good agreement with the EIS results, with high accuracy and a small fitting error.
Fig. 8 Schematic diagram of the corrosion architecture and equivalent circuits under different conditions. (a) At 20, 10, 0, and −5 °C. (b) At −10 °C. |
Fig. 9 shows the variation trends of the parameters related to the first time constant as the ambient temperature decreased from 20 °C to −5 °C. The value of the soil pore solution resistance RP gradually increased with decreasing temperature and sharply increased at −5 °C, which was related to the phase transition of the soil below 0 °C. The capacitance value of the pore solution Cp continually decreased during the cooling process, indicating that the charge flow was significantly inhibited. At the same time, low temperatures significantly inhibited ion activity, and the activity of ions in rust-soil solution interface was weakened. Thus, the rust-soil solution interface capacitance Cr-s continuously decreased with decreasing temperature and exhibited a sharp drop near 0 °C. The Rr-s value slightly fluctuated with decreasing temperature. When the temperature dropped to −10 °C, the Rr-s values of the Q235 and X80 steels were 511.9 Ω cm2 and 726.2 Ω cm2, respectively, indicating that the rust-soil solution interface had a high resistance value. This was because when the ambient temperature was lower than the freezing point, the solution content of the soil decreased, leading to rapidly increasing soil solution resistance. This was consistent with the increasing amplitude of the rightward shift in the high-frequency region of the Nyquist curves. The changes in the rust-soil solution interface indicate that the cooling process hindered the corrosion of steel.
Fig. 10 shows the variation trend of the parameters related to the second time constant as the ambient temperature decreased from 20 °C to −10 °C. The values of the double layer capacitances Cdl decreased with the decrease of temperature. It shows that the dielectric property of rust-substrate interface increased with decreasing temperature. The Rr associated with the rust layer fluctuated within a certain range with decreasing temperature, which was related to the repeated destruction of Cl−. The transition that occurred in the corrosion system had little effect on the resistance of the rust layer. The parameter n is used to represent the dielectric property of a component. When n = 0, CPE is equivalent to pure resistance, and when n = 1, CPE is equivalent to pure capacitance. Fig. 10 shows that the value of n decreased with decreasing temperature. This decline in dielectric ability meant that CPE showed stronger resistance properties. Rct characterises the difficulty of charge transfer and ion adsorption in a corrosion reaction zone, directly reflecting the dissolution and passivation behaviour of metal electrodes. The rapid increase in the Rct value as the temperature decreased was due to the gradually increasing ice phase content in the liquid film on the electrode surface in the reaction zone as the temperature decreased below the freezing point. This blocked electron and ion transport, resulting in a rapid increase in the diffusion impedance of the reaction zone, which was consistent with the phenomenon observed in the low-frequency region of the Nyquist curves. The value of Rct at 10 °C rapidly decreased, but at the same time, the Warburg impedance values for the Q235 and X80 steels were as high as 51167 Ω cm2 and 44294 Ω cm2, respectively. This demonstrated that the rate-controlling step of the corrosion reaction was transformed into the mass transfer process. During the cooling process of the corrosion system, the rate-controlling step of the corrosion reaction shifted from the joint charge transfer process and mass transfer process control to solely mass transfer process control.
ε′ = 1/(ωC0) × Z′′/(Z′2 + Z′′2) | (1) |
ε′′ = 1/(ωC0) × Z′/(Z′2 + Z′′2) | (2) |
Fig. 11 and 12 show the complex dielectric spectra of the steel corrosion systems at different temperatures. The real part of the complex dielectric constant is the dielectric constant (Fig. 11a and 12a), and the imaginary part is the dielectric loss (Fig. 11b and 12b). The dielectric properties of the soil were the dielectric properties of the solution in the soil. The water content of the solution and the type and quantity of dissociated ions were the main factors affecting the dielectric properties of this solution. This natural saline soil was internally complex, with many types of ions and a chaotic distribution. Thus, an uneven distribution of space charges was observed. Under an external electric field, soil polarisation exhibits inelastic polarisation characteristics—that is, relaxation polarisation.29 Relaxed polarisation leads to a longer polarisation time with energy loss, and is affected by both thermal motion disorder and electric field ordering. The relaxation polarisation in the soil consisted of ion relaxation polarisation and dipole relaxation polarisation. In addition, the soil was subject to space charge polarisation due to soil inhomogeneities. Therefore, the dielectric constants shown in Fig. 11 and 12 were the result of the superposition of multiple polarisation processes.
The soil solution contained a large number of weakly bound ions. Under the action of an electric field, cations and anions respectively move backwards and forward along the electric field, leading to the generation of electric moments between the cations and anions and causing an uneven distribution of internal charges in soil. This process is known as ion relaxation polarisation. Water is the main component of the solution in soil. The molecular structure of water is V-shaped, leading to the existence of positive and negative charge centres that are very close together but do not overlap. This configuration is a typical dipole. Under the action of an external electric field, water molecules orient their dipoles along the direction of the electric field, a process known as dipole relaxation polarisation.30 Compared with ion relaxation polarisation, dipole relaxation polarisation is slower and exhibits higher polarisation intensity. However, both polarisation processes are affected by temperature and the presence of an electric field. Increasing the temperature aggravates the thermal motion of the system and increases the activity of ions and dipole moments. In a certain temperature range, the enhancement of thermal motion can promote the polarisation of ions and dipoles, but when the temperature is too high, the thermal motion of the system is very violent, making polarisation difficult. Therefore, under the action of a temperature contradiction mechanism, the ionic relaxation polarisation intensity and dipole relaxation polarisation intensity are maximised.
In addition, the accumulation of free charges due to soil inhomogeneity and the hindering effect of impurities such as soil particles causes the positive charges in soil to move toward the negative poles of the electric field and the negative charges to move toward the positive poles of the electric field. This occurs under the action of the electric field, resulting in space charge polarisation. Temperature has a significant effect on the thermal movement of charges, with increasing temperature leading to a decrease in the intensity of space charge polarisation. Therefore, space charge polarisation occurs less frequently than relaxation polarisation due to the long time required for the space charge to accumulate. These polarisation processes are difficult to complete at high frequencies, so the dielectric constant therefore decreases and stabilises with increasing frequency.
The intensity of the polarisation established by ion relaxation was reflected in the 101 to 102 Hz frequency range of the dielectric constant. As the temperature decreased, the thermal motion of the ions weakened, and the time required to complete the polarisation increased. Thus, the polarisation frequency shifted toward lower frequencies. At the same time, the polarisation intensity decreased with decreasing temperature due to the lower thermal motion of ions. This meant that the ion activity was insufficient, making polarisation difficult. Moreover, when the temperature dropped below the freezing point, the viscosity of the solution increased and ion polarisation was more difficult to carry out.31 The completion time of dipole relaxation polarisation was slightly longer, and the response of high-intensity dipole polarisation to frequency was concentrated in the dielectric constant frequency range of 10−1 to 100 Hz. The maximum values of the dipole polarisation intensity in the soils where the two steels were located were achieved at different temperatures. This was influenced by the complexity and inhomogeneity of the natural saline soil. The influence of temperature on dipole polarisation was mainly due to the influence of temperature on the water molecules.32 The hydrogen bonding between the water molecules gradually increased with decreasing temperature, which weakened the thermal motion of water molecules. When the temperature was lower than the freezing point, hydrogen bonding bound the movement of water molecules, making them aligned and causing the water to freeze into ice. Frozen water molecules do not easily respond to electric field polarisation. The natural soil was complex and uneven, so when the temperature was low enough to cause a phase change in the soil, the change law of dipole polarisation intensity was more significant. Because of its characteristics, space charge polarisation only appeared at low frequencies, and because its intensity was not high, its characteristics were masked by relaxation polarisation.
Both relaxation polarisation and space charge polarisation are inelastic polarisation processes that lead to dielectric loss. A large number of studies have shown that the dielectric loss of soil is mainly caused by electrical conductivity. Electrical conductivity is affected by both water content and salt content. Fig. 12 shows that the change in the soil dielectric loss with temperature was not obvious when the temperature was higher than 0 °C. This was because the changes in the water content and salt content were not clear. When the temperature dropped below the freezing point, the soil-connected pores froze, the free water content decreased, and the conductive pathways in the soil sharply decreased. At the same time, the ionic activity in the solution was very low, and charge transfer in the solution was blocked. The dielectric constant and dielectric loss of the soil below the freezing point were related to the content of unfrozen water in the soil.
The changes in the dielectric constant and dielectric loss of the soil demonstrate that the temperature affected the dielectric properties of the soil by changing the thermal motion of water molecules and ions and by controlling the phase transition of the soil. The corrosion of steel in soil mainly depends on the charge transfer and diffusion mass transfer of the soil solution. The activity of the corrosion system and the phase change of the water directly affect the charge transfer and diffusive mass transfer processes in soil and are the main factors inhibiting steel corrosion at low temperatures.
The kinetic parameters Ecorr and Icorr related to the corrosion process were obtained by fitting the polarisation curve using the Tafel method. Ecorr and Icorr were used to characterise the corrosion tendency and the rate of the corrosion reaction, respectively. The value of Icorr can be calculated by using the Stern–Geary equation (eqn (3))
(3) |
Q235 | X80 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
T (°C) | ba | bc | B | ba | bc | B |
20 | 101.54 | 182.2 | 28.31 | 95.37 | 77.45 | 18.56 |
10 | 107.69 | 172.34 | 28.78 | 101.45 | 74.26 | 18.62 |
0 | 116.13 | 219.39 | 32.97 | 125.31 | 91.24 | 22.93 |
−5 | 165.47 | 111.96 | 29.00 | 140.85 | 102.04 | 25.69 |
−10 | 238.89 | 158.55 | 41.38 | 205.41 | 131.62 | 34.83 |
The variation of the Tafel slope can reflect the degree of metal polarization. The ba values of Q235 steel and X80 steel gradually increased with the increase of temperature, indicating that the soil cooling process would significantly slow down the dissolution rate of metal, and the corrosion reaction would be more difficult to occur. Cathodic Tafel slope bc value gradually increased with temperature decrease is associated with an increased dissolved oxygen content in the process. The rapid decrease of bc value of Q235 steel at −5 °C was affected by solution freezing. The same temperature, the Q235 steel Stern–Geary coefficient B above X80 steel shows that under the same environment of X80 steel more resistant to corrosion.
The corrosion rate of the electrode was calculated by eqn (4).
(4) |
The trends of Ecorr, Icorr, and CR during the cooling process are exhibited in Fig. 15. According to Fig. 15, the corrosion rates of the Q235 and X80 steels slowed down with decreasing temperature. Ecorr continuously decreased in the range of 20–5 °C, which was related to the increase of adsorbed OH− ions caused by the increase in the oxygen solubility of the soil. The value of Ecorr increased at −10 °C, and phase transformation occurred at the electrode interface at −10 °C. Thus, with decreasing temperature, the unfrozen water content decreased, the dissolved oxygen content in the solution decreased, diffusion was slowed down, and the corrosion process was difficult to carry out.
In soil, steel corrosion occurs due to oxygen absorption corrosion. The oxygen is reduced as a depolarising agent in the cathodic corrosion reaction (eqn (5)). Oxygen mainly participates in the reaction by dissolving in the pore solution and diffusing into the liquid film on the electrode surface. The solubility of oxygen is extremely dependent on the temperature. Oxygen solubility increases with decreasing temperature.31 In salt solutions, the difference in the solubility of oxygen at 20 °C and 0 °C can reach up to 50%.33 Furthermore, the temperature dependence of the diffusion coefficient of oxygen in solution is described by the Stokes–Einstein equation:36 (eqn (6)):
1/2O2 + H2O + 2e− → 2OH− | (5) |
(6) |
lnk(T) = lnA − Ea/RT | (7) |
The charge density of the electric double layer significantly influenced ion transport.37 This charge density was very sensitive to temperature. With decreasing temperature, the charge density decreased. This weakened the adsorption capacity of the electrode surface for OH −, which reduced the reaction rate of ferrous ions with OH− to generate ferrous hydroxide (eqn (8)). Thus, the anodic dissolution of iron was slowed down. The slowing trend of anodic dissolution was observed via the Rct values (Fig. 10) and anodic polarisation curves (Fig. 13 and 14) at 20, 10, and 0 °C. In addition, the Cl− in the soil significantly damaged the passivation film on the electrode surface,38,39 but as the charge density of the electric double layer decreased, the ability of the electrode surface to adsorb Cl− was weakened. This reduced the passivation potential of the electrode surface, and the passivation region widened.
Fe2+ + 2OH− → Fe(OH)2(s) | (8) |
The EIS curves (Fig. 5 and 6) and polarisation curves (Fig. 13 and 14) of the two steels at −5 °C and −10 °C show that the corrosion reaction was controlled by the mass transfer process. The reactants and products always diffused from areas of high concentration to areas of low concentration. Due to the existence of the ice phase, a diffusion barrier layer was formed on the electrode surface, and the diffusion of oxygen and the migration of metal cations were blocked. The control of the corrosion reaction rate by the mass transfer process was gradually strengthened as the temperature decreased, with mass transfer eventually becoming the rate-controlling step of the corrosion reaction.
It is important to be alert to the potential soil corrosion hazard caused by ion migration during the freezing and thawing process in seasonal frozen soil areas.50 During solution freezing, as ice crystals grow, large amounts of ions are expelled from these ice crystals, which enriches the area around the ice crystals and increases the salt content of unfrozen water in the frozen area.51 At the same time, intercrystalline channels with high conductivity and low freezing points are formed between the ice crystals. Due to the high concentration difference, salt diffuses into the unfrozen area.52 During freezing, salt in the soil is transported from the frozen zone to the unfrozen zone where buried underground pipes and facilities are located. This is a major challenge affecting the long-term corrosion resistance of underground facilities53 and significantly shortens their service life.
When the ambient temperature dropped, the relaxation time constant of the electrochemical reaction of carbon steel in saline soil significantly increased, the time to complete the relaxation process increased, and the corrosion reaction slowed down. Carbon steel in the temperature range of −5 to 20 °C exhibited the equivalent circuit of (Cr-s(Rr-s(CpRp)))(Cdl(Rr(CPERct))), with the exception of −10 °C, where the equivalent circuit was (Cr-sRr-s)(Cdl(Rr(CPE(RctW)))). The rate-controlling step of the carbon steel corrosion reaction shifted from a charge transfer and mass transfer process to a mass transfer process.
The complex permittivity of the saline soil at different temperatures was calculated by EIS. Under the action of the electric field, the soil polarisation included relaxation polarisation and space charge polarisation. The change in the soil pore solution with temperature was the main factor affecting the dielectric capacity and polarisation intensity of the soil.
The polarisation curves show that the kinetic parameters related to corrosion were all suppressed during the cooling process. The anodic reaction was mainly affected by the water activity, the thermal motion of ions, and the unfrozen water content. The cathodic reaction was mainly affected by oxygen dissolution diffusion and pore connectivity.
The soil phase transition affected the mechanism of corrosion inhibition. When the solution was not frozen, temperature affected the corrosion process by changing the thermal motion of water, ions, and electrons in the solution as well as the concentration of dissolved oxygen. After the solution began to freeze, the unfrozen water content became the main influencing factor.
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