Effects of strain energy and grain size on corrosion resistance of ultrafine grained Fe-20%Cr steels with extremely low c and n fabricated by ECAP

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Abstract

Effect of strain energy and grain size on corrosion resistance of ultrafine grained (UFG) Fe-20%Cr steels with extremely low C and N fabricated by equal channel angular pressing (ECAP) was investigated. UFG structures of initial grain size of 144 nm exhibited the typical three-stage softening comprising recovery, recrystallization, and grain growth. Potentiodynamic polarization measurements were carried out with a conventional three-electrode cell to evaluate pitting potential. Pitting potential in 1000 mol · m-3 NaCl solution was nobler in UFG state, but pitting potential started to decrease monotonously at lower temperature compared to hardness. The degradation of corrosion resistance in the early stage of annealing is attributed to stability change of passivation by recovery of dislocation structures inside grains and in nonequilibrium grain boundaries. We therefore conclude that nobler potentials of UFG states were realized by not only grain size reduction but also defective deformation-induced UFG.

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Rifai, M., Miyamoto, H., & Fujiwara, H. (2015). Effects of strain energy and grain size on corrosion resistance of ultrafine grained Fe-20%Cr steels with extremely low c and n fabricated by ECAP. International Journal of Corrosion, 2015. https://doi.org/10.1155/2015/386865

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