chemical durability - meaning and definition. What is chemical durability
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What (who) is chemical durability - definition

GRADUAL DESTRUCTION OF MATERIALS BY CHEMICAL REACTION WITH ITS ENVIRONMENT
Corrode; Hydrogen grooving; Corrosions; Corroding; Corrosivity; Corrosives; Corrosion Types; Corrosion-resistant; Corrossion; Chemical durability; Hydrolytic class; Corrosion resistance; Corrosion and rusting; Corrosion prevention; Metal corrosion; Rusting of iron; Glass classification; Surface corrosion
  • climbing descender]] is anodized with a yellow finish.
  • electrified railway]] line
  • The US military [[shrink wrap]]s equipment such as helicopters to protect them from corrosion and thus save millions of dollars
  • type 316 stainless steel]]) of a heat exchanger in a seawater desalination plant
  • Galvanic corrosion of an aluminium plate occurred when the plate was connected to a mild steel structural support.
  • Galvanized]] surface
  • Glass corrosion
  • [[Gold nugget]]s do not naturally corrode, even on a geological time scale.
  • These [[neodymium magnet]]s corroded extremely rapidly after only 5 months of outside exposure
  • [[Ozone cracking]] in [[natural rubber]] tubing
  • Diagram showing cross-section of pitting corrosion
  • bolt]] and nut
  • Sacrificial anode attached to the hull of a ship
  • Sensitized metallic microstructure, showing wider intergranular boundaries
  • The collapsed Silver Bridge, as seen from the Ohio side
  • date=2007-11-05 }}. Glassproperties.com. Retrieved on 2012-07-15.</ref>
  • Normal microstructure of Type 304 stainless steel surface

Durability (database systems)         
PROPERTY OF A DATABASE SYSTEM GUARANTEEING THAT TRANSACTIONS THAT HAVE COMMITTED WILL SURVIVE PERMANENTLY IN THE EVENT OF CRASHES
Durability (data management); Durability (computer science); Durability (DBMS)
In database systems, durability is the ACID property which guarantees that transactions that have committed will survive permanently.
Chemical free         
TERM USED IN MARKETING
Chemical-free; Chemical-free consumer products; Draft:Chemical-free consumer products
Chemical free or chemical-free is a term used in marketing to imply that a product is safe, healthy or environmentally friendly because it only contains natural ingredients. From a chemist's perspective, the term is a misnomer, as all substances and objects are composed entirely of chemicals and energy.
chemical         
  • Chemicals in graduated cylinders and beaker.
  • center
  • Colors of a single chemical ([[Nile red]]) in different solvents, under visible and UV light, showing how the chemical interacts dynamically with its solvent environment.
  • [[Potassium ferricyanide]] is a compound of potassium, iron, carbon and nitrogen; although it contains cyanide anions, it does not release them and is nontoxic.
  • Native sulfur crystals. Sulfur occurs naturally as elemental sulfur, in [[sulfide]] and [[sulfate]] minerals and in [[hydrogen sulfide]].
  • Cranberry glass, while appearing homogeneous, is a ''mixture'' consisting of [[glass]] and colloidal [[gold]] particles of about 40{{nbsp}}nm in diameter, giving it a red color.
MATTER OF CONSTANT COMPOSITION BEST CHARACTERIZED BY THE ENTITIES (MOLECULES, FORMULA UNITS, ATOMS) IT IS COMPOSED OF AND CHARACTERIZED BY PHYSICAL PROPERTIES LIKE DENSITY
Chemicals; Chemical; Chemical sources; Pure substance; Chemical substances; Artificial material
(chemicals)
Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.
1.
Chemical means involving or resulting from a reaction between two or more substances, or relating to the substances that something consists of.
...chemical reactions that cause ozone destruction.
...the chemical composition of the ocean.
...chemical weapons.
ADJ: ADJ n
chemically
...chemically treated foods...
The medicine chemically affects your physiology.
ADV: ADV with v, ADV adj
2.
Chemicals are substances that are used in a chemical process or made by a chemical process.
The whole food chain is affected by the over-use of chemicals in agriculture.
...the chemical industry.
N-COUNT: usu pl

Wikipedia

Corrosion

Corrosion is a natural process that converts a refined metal into a more chemically stable oxide. It is the gradual deterioration of materials (usually a metal) by chemical or electrochemical reaction with their environment. Corrosion engineering is the field dedicated to controlling and preventing corrosion.

In the most common use of the word, this means electrochemical oxidation of metal in reaction with an oxidant such as oxygen, hydrogen or hydroxide. Rusting, the formation of iron oxides, is a well-known example of electrochemical corrosion. This type of damage typically produces oxide(s) or salt(s) of the original metal and results in a distinctive orange coloration. Corrosion can also occur in materials other than metals, such as ceramics or polymers, although in this context, the term "degradation" is more common. Corrosion degrades the useful properties of materials and structures including mechanical strength, appearance, and permeability to liquids and gases.

Many structural alloys corrode merely from exposure to moisture in air, but the process can be strongly affected by exposure to certain substances. Corrosion can be concentrated locally to form a pit or crack, or it can extend across a wide area, more or less uniformly corroding the surface. Because corrosion is a diffusion-controlled process, it occurs on exposed surfaces. As a result, methods to reduce the activity of the exposed surface, such as passivation and chromate conversion, can increase a material's corrosion resistance. However, some corrosion mechanisms are less visible and less predictable.

The chemistry of corrosion is complex; it can be considered an electrochemical phenomenon. During corrosion at a particular spot on the surface of an object made of iron, oxidation takes place and that spot behaves as an anode. The electrons released at this anodic spot move through the metal to another spot on the object, and reduce oxygen at that spot in presence of H+(which is believed to be available from carbonic acid (H2CO3) formed due to dissolution of carbon dioxide from air into water in moist air condition of atmosphere. Hydrogen ion in water may also be available due to dissolution of other acidic oxides from the atmosphere). This spot behaves as a cathode.