Materials Map

Discover the materials research landscape. Find experts, partners, networks.

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The Materials Map is an open tool for improving networking and interdisciplinary exchange within materials research. It enables cross-database search for cooperation and network partners and discovering of the research landscape.

The dashboard provides detailed information about the selected scientist, e.g. publications. The dashboard can be filtered and shows the relationship to co-authors in different diagrams. In addition, a link is provided to find contact information.

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The Materials Map is still under development. In its current state, it is only based on one single data source and, thus, incomplete and contains duplicates. We are working on incorporating new open data sources like ORCID to improve the quality and the timeliness of our data. We will update Materials Map as soon as possible and kindly ask for your patience.

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in Cooperation with on an Cooperation-Score of 37%

Topics

Publications (8/8 displayed)

  • 2020Impact of oxygen contamination on the electrochemical impedance spectroscopy of iron corrosion in H2S solutions16citations
  • 2019Corrosion and hydrogen permeation of low alloy steel in H2S-containing environments : the effect of test buffer solution chemistrycitations
  • 2019EIS study of iron and steel corrosion in aqueous solutions at various concentrations of dissolved H2S : impact of oxygen contamination.citations
  • 2019Corrosion and Hydrogen Permeation in H2S Environments with O2 Contamination, Part 2: Impact of H2S Partial Pressure5citations
  • 2018Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy of iron corrosion in H 2 S solutions75citations
  • 2018Corrosion of Pure iron and Hydrogen Permeation in the Presence of H 2 S with O 2 contaminationcitations
  • 2018Corrosion and Hydrogen Permeation in H2S Environments with O2 Contamination, 1: Tests on Pure Iron at High H2S Concentration11citations
  • 2018Electrochemical study of oxygen impact on corrosion and hydrogen permeation of Armco iron in the presence of H 2 Scitations

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Sutter, Eliane
7 / 29 shared
Joshi, Gaurav
3 / 8 shared
Tribollet, Bernard
8 / 97 shared
Kittel, Jean
8 / 59 shared
Mendibide, Christophe
7 / 23 shared
Duret-Thual, Claude
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Tran, Thi Tuyet Mai
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Ferrando, Nicolas
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Tran, Mai
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Mendibide, C.
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Belkhadiri, Khawla
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Co-Authors (by relevance)

  • Sutter, Eliane
  • Joshi, Gaurav
  • Tribollet, Bernard
  • Kittel, Jean
  • Mendibide, Christophe
  • Duret-Thual, Claude
  • Tran, Thi Tuyet Mai
  • Ferrando, Nicolas
  • Tran, Mai
  • Mendibide, C.
  • Belkhadiri, Khawla
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document

Corrosion and hydrogen permeation of low alloy steel in H2S-containing environments : the effect of test buffer solution chemistry

  • Joshi, Gaurav
  • Tribollet, Bernard
  • Kittel, Jean
  • Mendibide, Christophe
  • Ayagou, Martien Duvall Deffo
  • Tran, Thi Tuyet Mai
Abstract

H 2 S-containing (sour) service environments present a considerable risk of hydrogen induced cracking (HIC) and sulfide stress cracking (SSC) to steel line pipe, pressure vessel and tubular components during upstream oil and gas production, through the ability of H 2 S to corrode and promote hydrogen entry into the material bulk via a cathodic reaction process. Materials selection for sour service is made via standard test methods such as NACE TM0284 and NACE TM0177. A commonly used test solution (NACE TM0177 solution A) comprises sodium chloride (5.0%) + acetic acid (0.5%), to work in a range between pH 2.8-4.0. When pH stability is essential over long testing periods, solutions that are buffered by acetic acid with sodium acetate are proposed. NACE TM0177 solution B (5.0% NaCl + 0.4% sodium acetate + 2.5% acetic acid) presents an initial pH of 3.4-3.6, specified not to exceed pH 4.0 over the testing duration. Newer, alternative solutions from the high-strength line pipe (HLP) research committee from the Iron and Steel Institute of Japan (ISIJ) propose higher acetic acid/acetate concentrations for enhanced buffering capacity. This may offer practical testing advantages, although material corrosion rates and hydrogen uptake are possibly affected. In this conference proceeding, we report on the corrosion and hydrogen uptake performance of a sour-grade X65 steel exposed to NACE Solutions A and B, and an HLP solution (at the same pH as NACE B solution, i.e. pH 3.5) under continuous H 2 S purging (0.1 MPa, T = 24°C) over 720 hours. Electrochemical methods measure electrochemical impedance at the entry face of, and hydrogen permeation across, the X65 membrane. Overall, the differences we note are linked to the different weak acid/conjugate base concentration. Keywords Hydrogen permeation, acetic acid, hydrogen sulfide, X65 steel 2

Topics
  • impedance spectroscopy
  • corrosion
  • strength
  • steel
  • Sodium
  • Hydrogen
  • iron