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Cathodic protection of aluminium in seawater

Abstract

Cathodic protection of various 6000 aluminium alloys and variants of EN AW-5083 in seawater has been studied. The alloys were immersed in seawater and polarized to about −1.06 V versus Ag/AgCl for 1 year. The cathodic current density increased initially due to formation of a copper film on the surface, but the effect was temporary. After 200 days, the current demand for cathodic protection had stabilized on all the investigated alloys at 0 to about 20 mA/m2, depending on the Fe/Si ratio in the alloy. Depending on the content of noble intermetallic particles, the aluminium will corrode at a low and constant rate. Application of a coating on the aluminium will decrease the cathodic current demand for cathodic protection significantly. Coatings on submerged aluminium are very stable and not susceptible to degradation mechanisms like cathodic disbonding.
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Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Industry / Materials and Nanotechnology
  • Germany
  • Norsk Hydro ASA

Year

2024

Published in

Materials and corrosion - Werkstoffe und Korrosion

ISSN

0947-5117

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository