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Development of an Electrochemical Procedure for Monitoring Hydrogen Sorption/Desorption in Steel
Author(s) -
Berk Özdirik,
Kitty Baert,
Tom Depover,
J. Vereecken,
Kim Verbeken,
Herman Terryn,
Iris De Graeve
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of the electrochemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.258
H-Index - 271
eISSN - 1945-7111
pISSN - 0013-4651
DOI - 10.1149/2.0521713jes
Subject(s) - thiourea , desorption , sorption , hydrogen embrittlement , cyclic voltammetry , cathodic protection , hydrogen , electrochemistry , electrolyte , materials science , coulometry , carbon steel , analytical chemistry (journal) , chemistry , inorganic chemistry , metallurgy , electrode , adsorption , chromatography , corrosion , organic chemistry
Hydrogen embrittlement leads to mechanical degradation of metals. Hence, hydrogen sorption/desorption properties of metals need to be characterized. An electrochemical procedure based on cyclic voltammetry (CV) and potentiostatic polarization is elaborated on plain-carbon steel. The procedure consists of first two consecutive CV cycles (pretreatment and reference CV), followed by cathodic H-charging, and subsequent CV scans to study and quantify the H-sorption/desorption. Best practice in this procedure is to perform all steps consecutively without interruption or sample manipulations between steps to avoid spontaneous H-loss. The H-related interaction with the steel is clearly identified in the CV and can be differentiated from the electrolyte contribution coming from thiourea. The study confirms the role of thiourea as H-recombination poison in alkaline solution, and also demonstrates that it contributes to the CV response. Additionally, various charging times are investigated to study the time to H-saturation, and also the scan rate during the CV procedure is varied to study time-related phenomena. Dedicated discharging experiments were included in the study to complement the CV data, giving additional insights in the H-steel interaction. Moreover, hydrogen related findings are successfully verified by using a complimentary method, i.e. hot extraction. The better understanding of the peaks in the CV and the continuous procedure result in a reliable methodology to characterize the H-sorption/desorption in steel.

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