Papers - Action of Solutions of Sodium Silicate and Sodium IIydroxide at 250" C. on Steel under Stress (With Discussion)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 17
- File Size:
- 812 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1936
Abstract
Practical experience has shown that at elevated temperatures solutions containing sodium hydroxide may attack stressed steel in a manner that cannot be explained in terms of ordinary corrosion. Because the ductility of the metal has been greatly reduced during the reaction, the entire phenomenon is usually called "embrittlement." Thus, after several years of operation caustic evaporators have been so badly embrittled that rivets could be cracked off with the blow of a hammer. Since fine intergranular cracks are almost always present in the zone of fracture, it has often been assumed that a process of selective corrosion in grain boundaries was responsible for the failure, although this has not been clearly proved experimentally. Concentrations of sodium hydroxide below those necessary for the uniform, rapid attack of the steel surface are reported to be most effective in producing embrittlement2, 3. In the operation of steam boilers a similar type of failure has been found, mainly in riveted seams or other capillary spaces where the solution may concentrate and where high stresses may also exist. It is believed that in such localized areas the dissolved solids may reach a value many times the few hundred parts per million prevalent in the body of the boiler. While this type of boiler failure has been the subject of investigation for a period of 20 years1, an understanding of its mechanism and a rational basis for complete protection have not yet been secured. To procure this information the present investigation was
Citation
APA:
(1936) Papers - Action of Solutions of Sodium Silicate and Sodium IIydroxide at 250" C. on Steel under Stress (With Discussion)MLA: Papers - Action of Solutions of Sodium Silicate and Sodium IIydroxide at 250" C. on Steel under Stress (With Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1936.