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Characterization of steel cathodic polarization in seawater and its applications in offshore structure cathodic protection design

Posted on:1995-02-04Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Florida Atlantic UniversityCandidate:Wang, WeiqingFull Text:PDF
GTID:1471390014991036Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
aboratory experiments have been performed to characterize the effects of initial current density and selected variables (initial current density, temperature and surface treatment) upon the cathodic polarization behavior of API 2H Grade 42 steel in natural sea water. The procedure involved galvanic coupling of a cylindrical steel specimen to a larger diameter aluminum sacrificial anode ring through an external resistor, which offset the otherwise impractically small anode/cathode surface area ratio and permitted the desired initial current density to be realized. In the initial polarization stage the change in potential versus current density data with time was found to be linear with a slope equal to the product of the total circuit resistance and cathode surface area and with the vertical intercept corresponding to the anode open circuit potential. Lower temperature or increased flow resulted in reduced polarization and a relatively high current density, but data for experiments employing a particular resistance conformed to straight lines with the same slope...
Keywords/Search Tags:Current density, Polarization, Steel, Cathodic
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