Beschreibung
This handbook is derived from the online reference "Corrosion Handbook", bringing together the relevant information about corrosion protection and prevention for steels, one of the most widely used materials. It provides comprehensive information, including tabulated data and references, on the corrosion properties of the following materials: Unalloyed steels and cast steel, unalloyed cast iron, high-alloy cast iron, high-silicon cast iron, structural steels with up to 12% chromium, ferritic chromium steels with more than 12% chromium, ferritic-austenitic steels with more than 12% chromium, high-alloy multiphase steels, ferritic/perlitic-martensitic steels, ferritic-austenitic steels/duplex steels, austenitic chromium-nickel steels, austenitic chromium-nickel-molybdenum steels, austenitic chromium-nickel steels with special alloying additions, special iron-based alloys, and zinc.The following corrosive media are considered: Seawater, brackish water, industrial waste water, municipal waste water, drinking water, high-purity water.
Autorenportrait
Michael Schütze, born in 1952, studied materials sciences at the University of Erlangen-Nürnberg from 1972 to 1978, then joined the Karl Winnacker Institute of the DECHEMA as a research associate. He received his doctorate in engineering sciences from the RWTH (Technical University) in Aachen in 1983, completed his habilitation in 1991, becoming a member of the external teaching staff of the RWTH. Since 1998, he holds a professorship there. He was appointed director of the Karl Winnacker Institute in 1996 and Chairman of the executive board of DECHEMA Forschungsinstitut in 2012. He is recipient of the Friedrich-Wilhelm-Prize, the Rahmel-Schwenk medal, the Otto-von-Guericke Prize, the Cavallaro medal, the U.R. Evans Award, the Khwarizmi Award and the UNIDO Award, past Chairman of the Gordon Conference on Corrosion, editor of the journal Materials and Corrosion, Past-President of the European Federation of Corrosion, Past-President of the World Corrosion Organization and Chairman of the Working Party Corrosion by Hot Gases and Combustion Products of the European Federation of Corrosion.
Marcel Roche, born in 1945, received his diplomas in Chemical Engineering from the Institut National des Sciences Appliquées of Lyon in 1967 and in Refining and Chemical Engineering from the Ecole Nationale Supérieure du Pétrole et des Moteurs in 1968. He worked as a corrosion engineer for the Institut Français de Pétrole and Technip Engineering from 1970 to 1979, when he moved to the Corrosion Department of Elf Aquitaine. He spent the remainder of his career in the field of Corrosion, Inspection and Materials in this Group which became TotalFinaElf and finally Total. He retired in June 2008 and became a corrosion consultant. Since July 2011, he is President of CEFRACOR, the French Corrosion Society, and of its department Conseil Français de la Protection Cathodique. He is a member of the Scientific and Technical Advisory Committee of the European Federation of Corrosion and a member of its Board of Administrators, representing France. He has been active in several European and international standardisation working groups, including CEN TC219 WG3 for cathodic protection in marine applications for which he has been Convenor from 2009 to 2014.
Roman Bender, born in 1971, studied chemistry at the Justus Liebig University of Giessen from 1992 to 1997. After he received his diploma he joined the Karl Winnacker Institute of the DECHEMA in Frankfurt (Main) as a research associate. Since 2000 he is head of the group materials and corrosion at the DECHEMA and editor in chief of the world's largest corrosion data collection, the DECHEMA Werkstofftabelle, and the Corrosion Handbook. In 2001 he received his doctorate in natural sciences from the Technical University of Aachen (RWTH Aachen). In 2008 Dr. Bender was appointed chief executive officer of the GfKORR - The Society for Corrosion Protection. As well, in 2013 he has been appointed as the Scientific Secretary of the European Federation of Corrosion.
Inhalt
Preface IX
How to use the Handbook XI
Warranty disclaimer 1
High Purity Water 3
Introduction 3
Physical and chemical properties 4
Unalloyed and low alloyed steels/Cast steel 6
Non-alloyed cast iron 21
High-alloyed cast iron 22
Ferritic chromium steels with< 13% Cr 22
Ferritic chromium steels with 13% Cr 24
High-alloyed multiphase steels 26
Austenitic CrNi steels 27
Austenitic CrNiMo(N)steels 52
Nickel 56
Nickel-chromium alloys 56
Nickel-chromium-iron alloys (without Mo) 56
Nickel-chromium-molybdenum alloys 67
Nickel-copper alloys 67
Nickel-molybdenum alloys 68
Zinc 68
Bibliography 69
Drinking Water 81
Introduction 82
Unalloyed steels and cast steel 87
Unalloyed cast iron 102
Structural steels with up to 12% chromium 104
Ferritic chromium steels with more than 12% chromium 104
Ferritic-austenitic steels with more than 12% chromium 104
Austenitic chromium-nickel steels 104
Austenitic chromium-nickel-molybdenum steels 104
Austenitic chromium-nickel steels with special alloying additions 104
Zinc 112
Bibliography 147
Seawater 155
Introduction 155
Unalloyed and low-alloyed steels/cast steel 193
Unalloyed cast iron and low-alloy cast iron 224
High-alloy cast iron 226
Ferritic chromium steels with< 13% Cr 228
Ferritic chromium steels with 13% Cr 229
High-alloy multiphase steels 235
Ferritic/pearlitic-martensitic steels 235
Ferritic-austenitic steels/duplex steels 235
Austenitic CrNi steels 237
Austenitic CrNiMo(N) steels 239
Austenitic CrNiMoCu(N) steels 244
Nickel 260
Nickel-chromium alloys 262
Nickel-chromium-iron alloys (without Mo) 262
Nickel-chromium-molybdenum alloys 262
Nickel-copper alloys 263
Nickel-molybdenum alloys 270
Other nickel alloys 270
Zinc 270
Bibliography 273
Waste Water (Municipal) 289
Introduction 290
Unalloyed steels and cast steel 292
Unalloyed cast iron 294
Ferritic chromium steels with more than 12% chromium 299
Ferritic austenitic steels with more than 12% chromium 299
Austenitic CrNi steels 299
Austenitic CrNiMo(N) steels 299
Austenitic CrNiMoCu(N)-steels 299
Zinc 305
Bibliography 307
Waste Water (Industrial) 311
Introduction 311
Unalloyed steels and low-alloy steels/cast steel 312
Unalloyed cast iron and low-alloy cast iron 316
High-alloy cast iron 316
Silicon cast iron 316
Ferritic chromium steels with< 13 % Cr 320
Ferritic chromium steels with 13 % Cr 320
High-alloy multiphase steels 320
Ferritic/pearlitic-martensitic steels 320
Ferritic-austenitic steels/duplex steels 320
Austenitic CrNi steels 323
Austenitic CrNiMo(N) steels 323
Austenitic CrNiMoCu(N) steels 323
Nickel-chromium alloys 339
Nickel-chromium-iron alloys (without Mo) 339
Nickel-chromium-molybdenum alloys 339
Nickel-copper alloys 339
Zinc 343
Bibliography 344
Key to materials compositions 351
Index of materials 391
Subject index 401
Informationen zu E-Books
Alle hier erworbenen E-Books können Sie in Ihrem Kundenkonto in die kostenlose PocketBook Cloud laden. Dadurch haben Sie den Vorteil, dass Sie von Ihrem PocketBook E-Reader, Ihrem Smartphone, Tablet und PC jederzeit auf Ihre gekauften und bereits vorhandenen E-Books Zugriff haben.
Um die PocketBook Cloud zu aktivieren, loggen Sie sich bitte in Ihrem Kundenkonto ein und gehen dort in den Bereich „E-Books“. Setzen Sie hier einen Haken bei „Neue E-Book-Käufe automatisch zu meiner Cloud hinzufügen.“. Dadurch wird ein PocketBook Cloud Konto für Sie angelegt. Die Zugangsdaten sind dabei dieselben wie die Ihres Kundenkontos in diesem Webshop.
Weitere Informationen zur PocketBook Cloud finden Sie unter www.meinpocketbook.de.
Allgemeine E-Book-Informationen
E-Books in diesem Webshop können in den Dateiformaten EPUB und PDF vorliegen und können ggf. mit einem Kopierschutz versehen sein. Sie finden die entsprechenden Informationen in der Detailansicht des jeweiligen Titels.
E-Books ohne Kopierschutz oder mit einem digitalen Wasserzeichen können Sie problemlos auf Ihr Gerät übertragen. Sie müssen lediglich die Kompatibilität mit Ihrem Gerät prüfen.
Um E-Books, die mit Adobe D(igital)R(ights)Management bzw. "Digitalem Wasserzeichen" geschützt sind, auf Ihr Lesegerät zu übertragen, benötigen Sie zusätzlich eine Adobe ID und die kostenlose Software Adobe® Digital Editions, wo Sie Ihre Adobe ID hinterlegen müssen. Beim Herunterladen eines mit Adobe DRM geschützten E-Books erhalten Sie zunächst eine .acsm-Datei, die Sie in Adobe® Digital Editions öffnen müssen. Durch diesen Prozess wird das E-Book mit Ihrer Adobe-ID verknüpft und in Adobe® Digital Editions geöffnet.