fig3

A review on pitting corrosion and environmentally assisted cracking on duplex stainless steel

Figure 3. (A-C) EDS analyses revealed that the elements in the passive film are unevenly distributed. (Reproduced with permission[30]. Copyright 2019, Elsevier). Chromium, molybdenum and tungsten are enriched in the passive film on the ferrite phase. Nitrogen and nickel are enriched in the passive film on the austenite phase. (D and E) Line-scanning from the passive film to the matrix revealed that nickel is enriched at the film/matrix interface. (Reproduced with permission[30]. Copyright 2019, Elsevier). (F) FIB analyses demonstrated that the passive film thicknesses of ferrite and austenite phases are already the same. (Reproduced with permission[30]. Copyright 2019, Elsevier). (G1 and G2) Scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) results show that the energy gap (Eg) of passive film on the ferrite phase is higher than that of the austenite phase, which means that passive film on the ferrite phase has a higher local energy gap between different semi-conductive characteristics (local conduction band potential and local valence band potential) (Reproduced with permission[30]. Copyright 2019, Elsevier). (H1 and H2) The chromium oxide content of the passive film on the ferrite phase is higher than that on the austenite phase[29]. (Open access).

Microstructures
ISSN 2770-2995 (Online)
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