Biancun Xie, Madhavan Swaminathan, et al.
EMC 2011
This article describes the susceptibility of 316L stainless steel to stress corrosion cracking (SCC) in a nitrite-containing chloride solution. Slow strain rate testing (SSRT) in 30 wt. % MgCl2 solution established SCC susceptibility, as evidenced by post-SSRT fractography. Addition of nitrite to the chloride solution, which is reported to have inhibitive influence on corrosion of stainless steels, was found to increase SCC susceptibility. The susceptibility was also found to increase with nitrite concentration. This behaviour is explained on the basis of the passivation and pitting characteristics of 316L steel in chloride solution.
Biancun Xie, Madhavan Swaminathan, et al.
EMC 2011
C.M. Brown, L. Cristofolini, et al.
Chemistry of Materials
J. Tersoff
Applied Surface Science
Michael Ray, Yves C. Martin
Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering