-
- open-circuit potential.
- The potential of an electrode measured with
respect to a reference electrode or another electrode
when no current flows to or from it.
-
- organic.
- Being or composed of hydrocarbons or their derivatives,
or matter of plant or animal origin. Contrast with inorganic.
-
- organic acid.
- A chemical compound with one or more carboxyl radicals
(COOH) in its structure; examples are butyric acid, CH3(CH2)2COOH;
maleic acid, HOOCCH-CHCOOH; and benzoic acid, C6H5COOH.
-
- organic zinc-rich paint.
- Coating containing zinc powder pigment andan organic resin.
-
- overaging.
- Aging under conditions of time and temperature
greater than those required to obtain maximum change in a
certain property, so that the property is altered in the
direction of the initial value.,/dd>
- oveheating.
- Heating a metal or alloy to such a high temperature that
its properties are impaired. When the original properties
cannot be restored by further heat treating, by
mechanical working, or by a combination of working and
heat treating, the overheating is known as burning.
-
- overvoltage.
- The difference between the actual electrode potential
when appreciable electrolysis begins and the reversible
electrode potential.
-
- oxidation.
- (1) A reaction in which there is an increase in valence
resulting from a loss of electrons. Contrast with reduction.
(2) A corrosion reaction in which the corroded metal
forms an oxide; usually applied to reaction with a gas
containing elemental oxygen, such as air.
-
- oxidized surface (on steel).
- Surface having a thin, tightly adhering, oxidized skin
(from straw to blue in color), extending in from the edge
of a coil or sheet.
-
- oxidizing agent.
- A compound that causes oxidation, thereby itself
being reduced.
-
- oxygen concentration cell.
- A galvanic cell resulting from difference in oxygen
concentration between two locations; See differential
aeration cell.
-
- ozone.
- A powerfully oxidizing allotropic form of the element
oxygen. The ozone molecule contains three atoms (O3).
Ozone gas is decidedly blue, and both liquid and solid
ozone are an opaque blue-black color, similar to that of
ink.
-
- partial annealing.
- An imprecise term used to denote a treatment given
cold-worked material to reduce its strength to a
controlled level or to effect stress relief. To be
meaningful, the type of material, the degree of cold
work, and the time-temperature schedule must be stated.
-
- parting.
- The selective attack of one or more components of a solid
solution alloy; eg. dezincification, dealumination etc.
See dealloying.
- parts per billion.
- A measure of proportion by weight, equivalent to one unit
weight of a material per billion (109) unit
weights of compound. One part per billion is equivalent
to 1 mg/kg.
-
- parts per million.
- A measure of proportion by weight, equivalent to one unit
weight of a material per million (106) unit
weights of compound. One part per million is equivalent
to l mg/g
-
- passivation.
- (1) A reduction of the anodic reaction rate of an
electrode involved in corrosion. (2) The process in metal
corrosion by which metals become passive. (3) The
changing of a chemically active surface of' a metal to a
much less reactive state. Contrast with activation.
-
- passivator.
- A type of inhibitor that appreciably changes
the potential of u metal to a more noble (positive)
value.
-
- passive.
- (1) A metal corroding under the control of a surface
reaction product. (2) The state of the metal surface
characterized by low corrosion rates in a potential
region that is strongly oxidizing for the metal. (3) The
state of a metal when its behavior is much more noble
than its position in the EMF series would predict. This
is a surface phenomena.
-
- passive-active cell.
- (1) A cell, the emf of which is due to the potential
difference between a metal in an active state and the
same metal in a passive state. (2) A corrosion cell in
which the anode is a metal in the active state
and the cathode is the same metal in the passive
state.
-
- passivity.
- A condition in which a piece of metal, because of an
impervious covering of oxide or other compound, has a potential
much more positive than that at the metal in the
active state.
-
- patina.
- The coating, usually green, that forms on the
surface of metals such as copper and copper alloys
exposed to the atmosphere. Also used to describe the
appearance of a weathered surface of any metal.
-
- pearlite.
- A metastable lamellar aggregate of ferrite and
cementite resulting from the transformation of austenite
at temperatures above the bainite range.
-
- phosphating.
- Forming an adherent phosphate coating on a metal by
immersion in a suitable aqueous phosphate solution. Also
called phosphatizing. See also conversion coating.
-
- pH.
- A measure of the acidity or alkalinity of a
solution; The negative logarithm of the hydrogen-ion
activity; it denotes the degree of acidity or basicity of
a solution. At 25 ºC (77 ºF), 7.0 is the neutral value.
Decreasing values below 7.0 indicate increasing acidity;
increasing values above 7.0, increasing basicity.
-
- physical vapor deposition.
- A coating process whereby the cleaned and masked
component to be coated is heated and rotated on a spindle
above the streaming vapor generated by melting and
evaporating a coating material source bar with a focused
electron beam in an evacuated chamber.
-
- physisorption.
- The binding of an adsorbate to the surface of a
solid by forces whose energy levels approximate those of
condensation. Contrast with chemisorption.
-
- pickle.
- A solution or process used to loosen or remove
corrosion products such as scale or tarnish.
-
- pickling.
- Removing surface oxides from metals by chemical or
electrochemical reaction.
-
- pitting.
- Localized corrosion of a metal surface,
confined to a point or small area, that takes the form of
cavities or pits.
-
- pitting factor.
- Ratio of the depth of the deepest pit resulting from
corrosion divided by the average penetration as
calculated from weight loss.
-
- plane strain.
- The stress condition in linear elastic fracture
mechanics in which there is zero strain in a
direction normal to both the axis of applied tensile
stress and the direction of crack growth (that is,
parallel to the crack front); most nearly achieved in
loading thick plates along a direction parallel to the
plate surface. Under plane-strain conditions, the plane
of fracture instability is normal to the axis of the
principal tensile stress.
-
- plane stress.
- The stress condition in linear elastic fracture
mechanics in which the stress in the thickness
direction is zero; most nearly achieved in loading very
thin sheet along a direction parallel to the surface of
the sheet. Under plane-stress conditions, the plane of
fracture instability is inclined 45º to the axis of the
principal tensile stress.
-
- plasma spraying.
- A thermal spraying process in which the
coating material is melted with heat from a plasma torch
that generates a nontransferred arc: molten coating
material is propelled against the base metal by the hot,
ionized gas issuing from the torch.
-
- plastic deformation.
- The permanent (inelastic) distortion of metals under
applied stresses that strain the material beyond its elastic
limit.
-
- plasticity.
- The property that enables a material to undergo
permanent deformation without rupture.
-
- polarization.
- (1) The change from the open-circuit electrode
potential as the result of the passage of current. (2) A
change in the potential of an electrode during
electrolysis, such that the potential of an anode becomes
more noble, and that of a cathode more active,
than their respective reversible potentials. Often
accomplished by formation of a film on the electrode
surface.
-
- polarization admittance.
- The reciprocal of polarization resistance
(di/dE).
-
- polarization curve.
- A plot of r urrent density versus electrode
potential for a specific electrode-electrolyte
combination.
-
- polarization resistance.
- The slope (dE/di) at the corrosion
potential of a potential (E)/current density (i)
curve. Also used to describe the method of measuring
corrosion rates using this slope.
-
- polyester.
- Resin formed by condensation of polybasic and
monobasic acids with polyhydric alcohols.
-
- polymer.
- A chain of organic molecules produced by the joining
of primary units called monomers.
-
- potential.
- Any of various functions from which intensity or
velocity at any point in a field may be calculated. The
driving influence of an electrochemical reaction. See
also active potential, chemical potential, corrosion
potential, critical pitting potential, decomposition
potential, electrochemical potential, electrode
potential, electrokinetic potential, equilibrium
(reversible) potential, free corrosion potential, noble
potential, open-circuit potential, protective potential,
redox potential, and standard electrode potential.
-
- potential-pH diagram.
- See Pourbaix (potential-pH) diagram.
-
- potentiodynamic (potentiokinetic).
- The technique for varying the potential of an
electrode in a continuous manner at a preset rate.
-
- potentiostat.
- An instrument for automatically maintaining an
electrode in an electrolyte at a constant potential or
controlled potentials with respect to a suitable
reference electrode.
-
- potentiostatic.
- The technique for maintaining a constant electrode
potential.
-
- poultice corrosion.
- A term used in the automotive industry to describe
the corrosion of vehicle body parts due to the collection
of road salts and debris on ledges and in pockets that
are kept moist by weather and washing. Also called
deposit corrosion or attack.
-
- Pourbaix (potential-pH) diagram.
- A plot of the redox potential of a corroding
system versus the pH of the system, compiled using
thermodynamic data and the Nernst equation. The
diagram shows regions within which the metal itself or
some of its compounds are stable.
-
- powder metallurgy.
- The art of producing metal powders and utilizing
metal powders for production of' massive materials and
shaped objects.
-
- precious metal.
- One of the relatively scarce and valuable metals:
gold, silver, and the platinum-group metals. Also called noble
metal(s).
-
- precipitation hardening.
- Hardening caused by the precipitation of a
constituent from a supersaturated solid solution. See
also age hardening and aging.
-
- precipitation heat treatment.
- Artificial aging in which a constituent
precipitated from a supersaturated solid solution.
-
- precracked specimen.
- A specimen that is notched and subjected to
alternating stresses until a crack has developed at the
root of the notch.
-
- primary current distribution.
- The current distribution in an electrolytic cell that
is free of polarization.
-
- primary passive potential (passivation
potential).
- The potential corresponding to the maximum active
current density (critical anodic current density) of an
electrode that exhibits active-passive corrosion
behavior.
-
- primer (prime coat).
- The first coat of paint applied to a surface.
Formulated to have good bonding and wetting
characteristics; may or may not contain inhibiting
pigments.
-
- principal stress (normal).
- The maximum or minimum value at the normal stress
at a point in a plane considered with respect to all
possible orientations of the considered plane. On such
principal planes the shear stress is zero. There are
three principal stresses on three mutually perpendicular
planes. The state of stress at a point may be (1)
uniaxial, a state of stress in which two of the three
principal stresses are zero, (2) biaxial, a state of
stress in which only one of the three principal stresses
is zero, and (3) triaxial, a state of stress in which
none of the principal stresses is zero. Multiaxial stress
refers to either biaxial or triaxial stress.
-
- profile.
- Anchor pattern on a surface produced by abrasive
blasting or acid treatment.
-
- protective potential.
- The threshold value of the corrosion potential that
has to be reached to enter a protective potential
range. The term used in cathodic protection to refer to
the minimum potential required to supress corrosion.
-
- protective potential range.
- A range of corrosion potential values in
which unacceptable corrosion resistance is achieved for a
particular purpose.
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