Papers - New York Meeting – February, 1929 - Practical Application of Corrosion Tests; Resistance of Nickel and Monel Metal to Corrosion by Milk. (With Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Robert J. McKay O. B. J. Fraser H. E. Searle
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
45
File Size:
2412 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1929

Abstract

The practical study of corrosion requires consideration of its economic aspects. It must be based on sound scientific principles, but it should be borne in mind that probably the most important object of a corrosion test is to determine what metal in corrosion-resisting construction will produce the greatest operating profit. Thus the corrosion test must be directly connected with money values or it is not a practical corrosion test. This, perhaps unusual, connection between corrosion and economics is partially due to the fact that corrosion deals only with the time factor or duration of equipment, and it is almost the only test which deals with this feature. In these statements a departure is made from the academic definition of the word corrosion and it is done deliberately. The use of the term corrosion is unusual. It is as though we spoke of a tensile test as a "breaking" test. We are not interested primarily in the break but in the strength of the metal. There is no English word which expresses our main interest in corrosion-testing, but let us have clearly in mind that we make corrosion tests to prevent corrosion. Our real interest is in this corrosion-prevention, not in the corrosion. Previous to 1922, it was common comment that "it is impossible to determine the course of corrosion by laboratory testing.'' This statement was true at that time in that the technique of laboratory testing for corrosion resistance was so vague that tests in the laboratory gave untrue results almost as often as true ones. This was so, even in the simple case of determining which one of two metals better resists a given solution. While this is no longer true the number of misleading "corrosion tests" still being ground out by laboratories is too large in the light of our present knowledge. There are two important features of corrosion testing whose neglect is a large contributing factor to misleading results: (1) The economic relations of the corrosion tests to other tests; (2) testing technique. Regarding economic relations J. F. Thompson l has said: "The use of any particular metal is rarely based upon the sole property of resistance to corrosion. In fact, I should like to venture the assertion
Citation

APA: Robert J. McKay O. B. J. Fraser H. E. Searle  (1929)  Papers - New York Meeting – February, 1929 - Practical Application of Corrosion Tests; Resistance of Nickel and Monel Metal to Corrosion by Milk. (With Discussion)

MLA: Robert J. McKay O. B. J. Fraser H. E. Searle Papers - New York Meeting – February, 1929 - Practical Application of Corrosion Tests; Resistance of Nickel and Monel Metal to Corrosion by Milk. (With Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1929.

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