CORROSION OF GRAPHITE-FIBER-REINFORCED COMPOSITES .2. ANODIC POLARIZATION DAMAGE

被引:14
|
作者
SLOAN, FE [1 ]
TALBOT, JB [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV CALIF SAN DIEGO, LA JOLLA, CA 92093 USA
关键词
ANODIC; COMPOSITE MATERIALS; EPOXY; GRAPHITE; STRAY CURRENT;
D O I
10.5006/1.3315904
中图分类号
T [工业技术];
学科分类号
08 ;
摘要
In order to safely use graphite-fiber-reinforced polymer-matrix composites in structural applications, the long-term resistance of these materials to environmental degradation must be characterized. High-conductivity electrolytes such as seawater represent a commonly encountered and relatively benign environment An electrolyte is unlikely to chemically attack polymer-matrix composites such as graphite/epoxy, and long-term exposure typically would result in only minor moisture-induced damage. However, the relatively high conductivity of graphite fibers coupled with a high-conductivity electrolyte may promote damaging electrochemical reactions to occur Anodic polarization of graphite/epoxy (which could result from stray electrical currents) causes rapid and substantial corrosion damage at applied current densities as low as 1 muA/cm2. Unlike metals, where corrosion damage results from direct electrochemical dissolution damage of graphite-fiber polymer matrix composites is the result of secondary chemical reactions involving electrochemically evolved species. Experimental evidence suggests that this damage is associated with oxygen evolution at the anode. The mechanism is thought to be attack by adsorbed atomic oxygen, which occurs as an intermediate in the O2 evolution reaction.
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页码:1020 / 1026
页数:7
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