The effect of thermodynamic changes in the cooling of saline soils on the corrosion system of carbon steels
Abstract
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.