Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/78220
Type: Conference paper
Title: Reactive wetting in corrosion: a mild steel example
Author: Ng, L.
Fung, C.
Connor, J.
Ngothai, Y.
Druskovich, D.
Sedev, R.
Citation: Annual Conference of the Australasian Corrosion Association, held in Melbourne, Victoria, 11-14 November, 2012: pp.479-490
Publisher: Australasian Corrosion Association Inc
Publisher Place: Australia
Issue Date: 2012
ISBN: 9781622769698
Conference Name: Annual Conference of the Australasian Corrosion Association (2012 : Melbourne, Victoria)
Statement of
Responsibility: 
L.W. Ng, C. Fung, J.N. Connor, Y. Ngothai, D. Druskovich and R. Sedev
Abstract: Wettability is a key factor in various engineering, scientific and industrial processes. the contact angle is the most common measure of the degree to which a liquid wets a solid surface. However, most investigations of contact angles focus on rather ideal systems where liquids wet inert, smooth, and homogenous surfaces which rarely exist in the real world. Reactive wetting occurs when the liquid reacts with the solid (as in corrosion) and has received much less attention. While the wetting principles remain unchanged, in time the chemical reactions affect the composition and properties of the three-phase system. The influence of chemical kinetics is further complicated by the effects of mass transport. we have examined the corrosion of mild steel under a small aqueous droplet (basic, neutral or acidic). In order to correlate the corrosion process with the wettability of the metal surface, electrochemical measurements of the corrosion rate were combined with contact angle measurements. we show how wettability is affected by corrosion and, at the same time, the local corrosion rate is modified by the conditions imposed by the fixed volume of the droplet and its evaporation. These findings are relevant for the performance of tools and engineering structures subjected to water spraying or under condensation-evaporation conditions.
Rights: Copyright © (2012) by the Australasian Corrosion Association. All rights reserved.
Description (link): http://www.proceedings.com/17513.html
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest
Chemical Engineering publications

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