Atomic Investigation of Corrosion Mechanism and Surface Degradation of Fe-Cr-Ni Alloy in Presence of Water: Advance Reactive Molecular Dynamics Simulation

Kumar, Roshan and Kumar, Sunil and Sahu, Ranjan K and Kailath, A J (2023) Atomic Investigation of Corrosion Mechanism and Surface Degradation of Fe-Cr-Ni Alloy in Presence of Water: Advance Reactive Molecular Dynamics Simulation. Transactions of the Indian Institute of Metals, 77(3) . pp. 875-887.

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Abstract

Steel is the most versatile engineering and construction material. Construction, power, automobiles, infrastructure, manufacturing, and various industrial sectors are using steel as their most important raw material. It is also the most recycled metal material on earth. But steel is having a major problem of rusting when exposed to water. Interaction of steel products with water is almost unavoidable in majority of the cases like automobiles, construction, water pipes, etc. Thus a detailed atomistic study of steel with water is required to understand the corrosion behavior. At the atomic scale, Fe, Cr, and Ni are the major alloying elements of steel and are highly reactive with water which results in corrosion and degradation of both surface and bulk properties. Therefore, we have used reactive molecular dynamics simulation (RMDS) to investigate reactivity of water with Fe-Cr-Ni substrate. We have carried out a large number of simulations at different initial conditions and found that water molecules split into H and OH. Further, OH predominantly reacts with Cr and forms chromium oxide compounds over the Fe-Cr-Ni substrate. In the next step, variation in potential energy and mean square displacement have been used for quantitative characterization of the reaction between water and Fe-Cr-Ni substrate. This study can provide a detailed perspective on the corrosion behavior of steel in a humid environment.

Item Type:Article
Official URL/DOI:https://10.1007/s12666-023-03181-z
Uncontrolled Keywords:Steel, reactive molecular dynamics, corrosion, simulation, LAMMPS, pipeline steel, force-field, behavior, reaxff, concrete
Divisions:Material Science and Technology
ID Code:9530
Deposited By:HOD KRIT
Deposited On:09 May 2024 16:12
Last Modified:13 May 2024 12:26
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