Piping Systems and Applications! - Resources, Tools and Basic Information for Engineering and Design.
Connecting pipes of common piping materials may cause galvanic corrosion and serious damage
Sponsored Links
When connecting pipes of various materials their difference in electrode potential may cause galvanic corrosion and serious damage of pipes, valves and other equipment in the system. Under certain circumstances in environments like water with free ions (like salt sea water), acids or bases, higher temperatures and enough oxygen, the systems deteriorate very fast.
A very common connection in piping systems is copper and low-carbon steel. In connections like this steel corrodes many times faster than steel alone.
A metal with lower electrochemical potential will be the cathode in a connection and will remain unchanged. A metal with higher potential will be the anode and will corrode. The list below indicates the galvanic relationship between some materials commonly used in piping systems.
The metals above will resist the metals below. The greater the distance is between two metals, the greater the speed of corrosion.
| Titanium |
| Hastelloy C 4) |
| Monel |
| Stainless Steel passive |
| Silver |
| Bronze |
| Copper |
| Brass |
| Lead-Tin Alloys |
| Hastelloy A 4) |
| Stainless Steel 316 1) |
| Stainless Steel 430 2) |
| Stainless Steel 410 3) |
| Cast Iron |
| Low-carbon Steel |
| Aluminum Alloys |
| Magnesium Alloys |
1) Austenitic stainless steel with increased molybdenum content to increase resistance to corrosion compared to other 300 series alloys. Resist scaling at temperatures up to 1600oF (871oC). Used in industry, in marine environments and in a wide range of general industrial components.
2) Basic ferritic non-heat treatable stainless steel. Its strengths are in ductility, formability, good corrosion and oxidation resistance, thermal conductivity and finish quality. Used in automotive and architectural trim, heat exchangers and scientific equipment.
3) Martensitic stainless which attain high mechanical properties after heat treatment. Good impact strength, corrosion and scaling resistance up to 1200oF (649oC). Used in cutlery, steam and gas turbine blades and buckets, valve components and fasteners.
4) Hastelloy is a trademark for a series of high-strength, nickel based, corrosion resistant alloys. Other components includes molybdenum and chromium. Hastelloy is used in chemical applications. Resistant to pitting, stress-corrosion cracking and to oxidizing atmospheres up to 1900oF (1037oF).
Sponsored Links
Difficult to find your favorite ToolBox page? Add a link to the page in your own personal Shortlist!
Translate this page to
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Dutch
Norwegian
© The Piping ToolBox
The content in The Piping ToolBox is copyrighted but can be used with NO WARRANTY or LIABILITY. Important information should always be double checked with alternative sources. All applicable national and local regulations and practices concerning this aspects must be strictly followed and adhered to.
We appreciate any comments and tips on how to make The Piping ToolBox a better information source. Please contact us by email if You find any faults, inaccurate, or otherwise unacceptable information.
5 12 1
View Engineering, Design and Construction news in the absolute FREE Automatic WebSite Viewer. Engineering Breaking News!