Passivity and Protection of Metals Against Corrosion


Book Description

Considerable progress has been made in the past 20 years toward understanding the basic mechanisms of corrosion, and the application of this knowledge to its control. From the very beginning, educational institutions and industrial research laboratories have contributed greatly toward determining and elucidating the fundamental principles of corrosion reactions. Some of the basic principles involved in cor rosion of metals can be credited to early investigators. Michael Faraday in 1830-1840 studied the relationship between the quantity of a metal dissolved and the electric current which was produced by this reaction. He also proposed that the passivation of iron was through the formation of a film and that the dissolution of a metal was electro chemical in nature. Sir Humphrey Davy in 1824 worked out the funda mentals of galvanic corrosion of ships' hulls and applied sacrificial zinc anodes to protect them from sea water corrosion. Richard Arlie in 1847 demonstrated that corrosion produced by oxygen at the surface of iron in a flowing stream generated a current. With the fundamental knowledge available to him from these early investigators, Willis Rodney Whitney developed and expressed, in its most useful form, one of the basic scientific principles which provides modern corrosion specialists with a fundamental basis of corrosion control. Dr. Whitney concluded that corrosion of iron is electrochemical, and that the rate is simply a function of the electromotive force and resistance of the circuit.










Metals Abstracts


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Corrosion Abstracts


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National Union Catalog


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Includes entries for maps and atlases













Maintenance Engineering Handbook


Book Description

MAINTENANCE ENGINEERING HANDBOOK Sixth Edition The latest science, technology, and management solutions for facility maintenance issues The one reference you can bank on for current answers to virtually any maintenance question, Lindley R. Higgins’ and R. Keith Mobley’s Maintenance Engineering Handbook provides the best of today’s strategies and technologies from the world’s leading experts. • One-stop source of answers on all maintenance engineering functions, from managing, planning, and budgeting to solving environmental problems • New coverage of the latest computer applications, maintenance technologies, and tools • Strategies, equipment, techniques, and tips for facilities from industrial plants to residential complexes, institutions, schools, hospitals, and office buildings NEW IN THIS EDITION • Technology updates • Improvements in prevention and prediction • Equipment testing and monitoring tools • The latest computer programs • Advances in maintenance economics • Guidance on insurance administration • New maintenance techniques for centrifugal air compressors, centrifugal pumps, and other equipment Maintenance Engineering’s Most Current, Comprehensive, and Complete Reference A McGraw-Hill Classic 55 SPECIALISTS Buildings and grounds Computer applications Corrosion and cleaning Costs and controls Electrical equipment Estimates and budgets Instrumentation and monitoring tools Inventory Lubrication Measuring, servicing, testing Mechanical equipment Organization and management Parts and components Personnel and policies Practices and prevention Sanitation and housekeeping Specialized equipment Welding