The Oxygen Evolution Reaction Drives Passivity Breakdown for Ni–Cr–Mo Alloys

Author:

Larsson Alfred1ORCID,Grespi Andrea1ORCID,Abbondanza Giuseppe1ORCID,Eidhagen Josefin23,Gajdek Dorotea4ORCID,Simonov Konstantin5,Yue Xiaoqi2ORCID,Lienert Ulrich6ORCID,Hegedüs Zoltan6,Jeromin Arno7,Keller Thomas F.78ORCID,Scardamaglia Mattia9ORCID,Shavorskiy Andrey9ORCID,Merte Lindsay R.4ORCID,Pan Jinshan2ORCID,Lundgren Edvin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Lund University Division of Synchrotron Radiation Research Lund 221 00 Sweden

2. KTH Royal Institute of Technology Division of Surface and Corrosion Science Stockholm 100 44 Sweden

3. Alleima (former Sandvik Materials Technology) Sandviken 811 81 Sweden

4. Malmö University Materials Science and Applied Mathematics Malmö 205 06 Sweden

5. Swerim AB Department of Materials and Process Development Kista 164 07 Sweden

6. DESY Photon Science 22607 Hamburg Germany

7. Centre for X‐ray and Nano Science (CXNS) Deutsches Elektronen‐Synchrotron DESY 22607 Hamburg Germany

8. Department of Physics University of Hamburg 22607 Hamburg Germany

9. MAX IV Laboratory Lund University Lund 221 00 Sweden

Abstract

AbstractCorrosion is the main factor limiting the lifetime of metallic materials, and a fundamental understanding of the governing mechanism and surface processes is difficult to achieve since the thin oxide films at the metal–liquid interface governing passivity are notoriously challenging to study. In this work, a combination of synchrotron‐based techniques and electrochemical methods is used to investigate the passive film breakdown of a Ni–Cr–Mo alloy, which is used in many industrial applications. This alloy is found to be active toward oxygen evolution reaction (OER), and the OER onset coincides with the loss of passivity and severe metal dissolution. The OER mechanism involves the oxidation of Mo4+ sites in the oxide film to Mo6+ that can be dissolved, which results in passivity breakdown. This is fundamentally different from typical transpassive breakdown of Cr‐containing alloys where Cr6+ is postulated to be dissolved at high anodic potentials, which is not observed here. At high current densities, OER also leads to acidification of the solution near the surface, further triggering metal dissolution. The OER plays an important role in the mechanism of passivity breakdown of Ni–Cr–Mo alloys due to their catalytic activity, and this effect needs to be considered when studying the corrosion of catalytically active alloys.

Funder

Stiftelsen för Strategisk Forskning

Vetenskapsrådet

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science

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