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Welds
Welds pose a particular problem.
Each weld is a complex galvanic couple
made up of parent metal (e.g. a pipeline)
a weld metal and an area of heat affected
metal. Under many circumstances the bulk of the anodic dissolution is within the heat
affected zone (haz). This very thin anode and large cathode of parent metal is the worst
possible case
rapidly leading to failure. Conventional electrochemical testing in which a
sample of the weld is immersed and used as the working electrode will only reveal a low
overall net rate not the high rate in the heat affected zone. The solution is to segment
the sample weld
cutting out test electrodes of parent1
haz1
weld
haz2 and parent2.
These can then be coupled together and the individual response from each section measured.
The instrument to do this is called a Weld Tester. This instrument is a Gill 8 or 12 built
to accommodate the extra four working electrodes per cell. Once the cell is connected
the
full range of DC and AC tests are used to determine the susceptibility of each component
to corrosion.

This is then segmented
epoxy masked
and ground flat. All 5 electrodes
are added to the test electrolyte and connected to the Weld Tester


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