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LCM™
is a new technique developed in
partnership between ACM Instruments and Baker Petrolite.
It is revolutionary for electrochemical testing for
localised corrosion monitoring and goes about solving
the many pitfalls of electrochemical current & voltage
noise tests and the electrode scanning techniques. Below
is a good explanation of the technique, but for
questions and further discussion you should
contact us.
Abstract:
This
technique enables the user to monitor localised
corrosion such as that caused by pitting as well as
general corrosion rates with respect to time. The
technique primarily monitors Potential and then
periodically uses a special LPR type polarisation.
Data from the polarisation is used to calibrate
naturally occurring transients in the Potential data
into Current data. A simple case uses a Ohms Law
relationship. A more elaborate method of calibration
uses a V/I graph that takes into account the non
linearity of Electrochemistry, especially where large
transients are involved. It is then a matter of simple
mathematics to turn the number of Coulombs passed by a
Potential transient into metal loss and pit magnitude.
The technique is known as LCM™,
or Localised Corrosion Monitoring, a development between
Baker Petrolite and ourselves.
Theory
Potential Monitoring by itself does give information as
to localised activity on the electrodes surface. It is
possible to detect Potential Transients
in the data
relating to a localised event. However the technique
is blind in that there is no current information. A bit
like trying to measure the speed of a car from the rev
counter alone, without knowing which gear the car is
in. It is necessary to have current information as
well.
Consider a metal electrode with a single pit site. When
this pit goes active, the corrosion activity throws
electrons into the rest of the electrode from the Pit.
This reduces the potential of the electrode which has a
Cathodic Protection type effect, helping to repassivate
an active pit and generally stopping other pit sites
from going active. The electrons are used up by other
areas of the electrode and the potential slowly climbs
back up again.
Now
consider an area of the electrode that is not a pit
site. During a pitting event, this area experiences a
drop in potential caused by an excess of electrons that
increases the Cathodic Reaction. The passive area of
the electrode can not possibly know where the electrons
came from. It does not know the electrons came from a
pit. As far as the passive area is concerned, the
electrons could just as easily have come from a
Potentiostat, it will respond in the same way.
Thus,
we can use a Potentiostat to Polarise an electrode using
the same Potential Transient signal as produced by the
naturally occurring Pit. In this way we can work out as
exact as possible the number of coulombs of current
produced by the pit. Such a method takes into account
fully the non linearity of Electrochemistry, no matter
if the system is diffusion controlled or activation
controlled. It also takes into account charge and
discharge characteristics of the surface as the same
polarisation with the same sweep rates is used as the
naturally occurring transient.
There
is a problem with this method however, in that it
assumes that no naturally occurring pits are going to
activate during the calibration phase. This is largely
the case during the initial negative part of the
polarisation, as the Polarisation will tend to protect
the Electrode by Cathodic Protection from Pitting
events. If a natural pit is about to fire off, then
this will typically be put on hold by the negative going
polarisation. As the polarisation is returning towards
the initial Rest Potential, pits are more likely to fire
off causing errors in the calibration data.
To
compensate for these errors, only the negative going
side of the calibration sweep is applied to the
electrode. The electrode is then isolated at the end of
the polarisation and left to float whilst potential
measurements are again taken.
To
calibrate the Potential Transients using this method we
can either assume a linear calibration value of Rp, or
produce a calibration V - I table that takes into
account non linearity of electrochemistry. If the V - I
table is used, then the magnitude of the polarisation
should be of the same magnitude as the previous maximum
amplitude transient recorded since the last calibration
phase. It will be a matter of choice as to which
calibration method is used. A simple Rp value does not
need to polarise the electrode by much, which has
traditional appeal. Personally I like to use the full
calibration table, even if the polarisation is as much
as 100mV. A polarisation at 100 mV may give a
polarisation current that is 10 times more than a simple
Rp value would suggest obtained by a polarisation of
just 5mV. In this case a simple Rp method would
seriously underestimate the magnitude of the current
caused by the pitting event.
Having
got a method to monitor and measure the magnitude of
individual localised events, it is relatively easy to
separate the transients using a Histogram, showing
frequency and magnitude. Further presentation of the
data leads onto distance, speed and acceleration, or
total pit depth, pitting rate and rate of change of
pitting rate. I have made some assumptions here, as to
the profile of the pits and the number of pits. However
the method, especially with knowledge of the system
under test will be able to give useful pitting
information together with the general corrosion rate
obtained from the calibration sweeps.
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LATEST
LCM™
is a technique in constant development, and as a
valued customer of LCM™
you will be entitled to all developments and
software updates free of charge as and when they
are available.
Check back for latest developments. |