Hogar » Galvanic Corrosion

Galvanic Corrosion

1800
  • Luigi Galvani
  • Alessandro Volta

Galvanic corrosion is an electrochemical process where one metal corrodes preferentially when in electrical contact with another in the presence of an electrolyte. This occurs because the dissimilar metals create a bimetallic couple, with the less noble (more active) metal acting as the anode and corroding, while the more noble metal acts as the cathode.

The driving force for galvanic corrosion is the difference in electrode potential between the two dissimilar metals. When connected, they form a short-circuited electrochemical cell. The metal with the more negative electrode potential (the less noble metal) becomes the anode and undergoes oxidation, releasing electrons and metal ions into the electrolyte. For example, when zinc is in contact with steel in seawater, zinc oxidizes: [latex]Zn \\rightarrow Zn^{2+} + 2e^-[/latex].

Simultaneously, the more noble metal (with the more positive potential) becomes the cathode, where a reduction reaction occurs. The electrons released by the anode travel through the metallic connection to the cathode. In a neutral or acidic electrolyte like seawater, the reduction reaction is typically the reduction of oxygen: [latex]O_2 + 2H_2O + 4e^- \\rightarrow 4OH^-[/latex].

The rate of galvanic corrosion is influenced by several factors, including the potential difference between the metals (a larger difference leads to faster corrosion), the ratio of the cathode-to-anode surface area (a large cathode and small anode is the worst-case scenario, leading to rapid localized corrosion of the anode), and the conductivity of the electrolyte. The Galvanic Series, which ranks metals and alloys by their electrochemical potential in a specific electrolyte (commonly seawater), is a critical tool for engineers to predict and prevent this type of corrosion by selecting compatible materials.

UNESCO Nomenclature: 2203
– Electrochemistry

Tipo

Chemical Process

Disruption

Foundational

Utilización

Widespread Use

Precursors

  • Luigi Galvani’s discovery of ‘animal electricity’ (1780s)
  • Alessandro Volta’s invention of the voltaic pile (1800)
  • Michael Faraday’s laws of electrolysis (1834)

Aplicaciones

  • sacrificial anodes for protecting ship hulls and pipelines
  • galvanized steel (zinc revestimiento on steel)
  • batteries (the fundamental principle)
  • understanding material compatibility in engineering design

Patentes:

ESO

Potential Innovations Ideas

Membresía obligatoria de Professionals (100% free)

Debes ser miembro de Professionals (100% free) para acceder a este contenido.

Únete ahora

¿Ya eres miembro? Accede aquí
Related to: galvanic corrosion, bimetallic couple, electrochemistry, anode, cathode, electrolyte, galvanic series, sacrificial anode

Deja una respuesta

Tu dirección de correo electrónico no será publicada. Los campos obligatorios están marcados con *

DISPONIBLE PARA NUEVOS RETOS
Ingeniero Mecánico, Gerente de Proyectos o de I+D
Desarrollo eficaz de productos

Disponible para un nuevo desafío a corto plazo.
Contáctame en LinkedIn
Integración de electrónica de plástico y metal, diseño a coste, GMP, ergonomía, dispositivos y consumibles de volumen medio a alto, industrias reguladas, CE y FDA, CAD, Solidworks, cinturón negro Lean Sigma, ISO 13485 médico

Estamos buscando un nuevo patrocinador

 

¿Su empresa o institución se dedica a la técnica, la ciencia o la investigación?
> Envíanos un mensaje <

Recibe todos los artículos nuevos
Gratuito, sin spam, correo electrónico no distribuido ni revendido.

o puedes obtener tu membresía completa -gratis- para acceder a todo el contenido restringido >aquí<

Historical Context

(if date is unknown or not relevant, e.g. "fluid mechanics", a rounded estimation of its notable emergence is provided)

Related Invention, Innovation & Technical Principles

Scroll al inicio

También te puede interesar