4.7 Article

Effect of CO2 and pressure on the stability of steels with different amounts of chromium in saline water

Journal

CORROSION SCIENCE
Volume 65, Issue -, Pages 441-452

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.corsci.2012.08.041

Keywords

Low alloyed steel; Stainless steel; Pitting corrosion; Kinetic parameters; SEM

Funding

  1. FNK (Fachkonferenz fur wissenschaftlichliche Nachwuchskrafte) of the Applied University of Berlin, HTW
  2. IMPACT (EU) [EFRE 20072013 2/21]

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CO2-induced corrosion of casing and tubing steels is a relevant safety issue for compressing emission gasses into deep geological layers (CCS, Carbon Capture and Storage). The influence of CO2 and pressure of the surrounding media on steels is demonstrated in laboratory experiments providing a corrosive environment similar to a geological onshore CCS-site in the Northern German Basin (T = 60 degrees C, p = 1 - 100 bar, Stuttgart Aquifer, CO2-flow rate of 3 l/h, 700-8000 h exposure time). Corrosion kinetics and microstructures were characterized using specimens of heat treated 42CrMo4 (1.7225, casing) and soft annealed X46Cr13 (1.4034, tubing). (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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