promote corrosion - определение. Что такое promote corrosion
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Что (кто) такое promote corrosion - определение

TYPE OF CORROSION
Hot Corrosion; Hot corrosion; High Temperature Corrosion; HOT Corrosion; HOT corrosion; Fuel ash corrosion; High temperature corrosion
  • High-temperature sulfur corrosion of a 12 CrMo 19 5 pipe stub
Найдено результатов: 116
Microbial corrosion         
CORROSION CAUSED OR PROMOTED BY MICROORGANISMS
Microbially influenced corrosion
Microbial corrosion, also called microbiologically influenced corrosion (MIC), microbially induced corrosion (MIC) or biocorrosion, is "corrosion affected by the presence or activity (or both) of microorganisms in biofilms on the surface of the corroding material." This corroding material can be either a metal (such as steel or aluminum alloys) or a nonmetal (such as concrete or glass).
Corrosion fatigue         
  • alt=Graph showing effects of both true and stress corrosion
  • alt=Graph illustrating effects of air versus tap water on steels
  • alt=Graph showing increased crack growth under corrosion stress
  • alt=Graph of crack growth rate relative to corrosion fatigue
  • alt=Graph of crack growth with corrosion fatigue
FATIGUE IN A CORROSIVE ENVIRONMENT
Corrosion Fatigue
Corrosion fatigue is fatigue in a corrosive environment. It is the mechanical degradation of a material under the joint action of corrosion and cyclic loading.
corrode         
  • 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
  • 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
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
v. a.
1.
Erode, canker, eat away.
2.
Consume, waste, wear away, prey upon, impair.
3.
Blight, poison, envenom, embitter.
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
  • 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
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
Corrosion is a natural process that converts a refined metal into a more chemically stable oxide. It is the gradual destruction of materials (usually a metal) by chemical or electrochemical reaction with their environment.
corroding         
  • 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
  • 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
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
a.
Caustic, catheretic. See corrosive.
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
  • 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
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
·noun The action or effect of corrosive agents, or the process of corrosive change; as, the rusting of iron is a variety of corrosion.
Corroding         
  • 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
  • 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
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
·p.pr. & ·vb.n. of Corrode.
Corrosion inhibitor         
  • [[Benzotriazole]] inhibits corrosion of copper by forming an inert layer of this polymer on the metal's surface
CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS DECREASING THE CORROSION RATE OF A METAL
Corrosion inhibitors; Rust inhibitor; Anti-corrosion; Anti corrosion; Evaluation of Anodic corrosion inhibitor; Corrosion inhibition
A corrosion inhibitor or anti-corrosive is a chemical compound that, when added to a liquid or gas, decreases the corrosion rate of a material, typically a metal or an alloy, that comes into contact with the fluid.Hubert Gräfen, Elmar-Manfred Horn, Hartmut Schlecker, Helmut Schindler "Corrosion" Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry, Wiley-VCH: Weinheim, 2002.
corrode         
  • 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
  • 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
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
(corrodes, corroding, corroded)
1.
If metal or stone corrodes, or is corroded, it is gradually destroyed by a chemical or by rust.
He has devised a process for making gold wires which neither corrode nor oxidise...
Engineers found the structure had been corroded by moisture...
Acid rain destroys trees and corrodes buildings.
VERB: V, be V-ed, V n
corroded
The investigators found that the underground pipes were badly corroded.
ADJ
2.
To corrode something means to gradually make it worse or weaker. (LITERARY)
Suffering was easier to bear than the bitterness he felt corroding his spirit...
VERB: V n
Corrode         
  • 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
  • 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
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
·vi To have corrosive action; to be subject to corrosion.
II. Corrode ·vt To Consume; to wear away; to prey upon; to Impair.
III. Corrode ·vt To eat away by degrees; to wear away or diminish by gradually separating or destroying small particles of, as by action of a strong acid or a caustic alkali.

Википедия

High-temperature corrosion

High-temperature corrosion is a mechanism of corrosion that takes place when gas turbines, diesel engines, furnaces or other machinery come in contact with hot gas containing certain contaminants. Fuel sometimes contains vanadium compounds or sulfates which can form compounds during combustion having a low melting point. These liquid melted salts are strongly corrosive for stainless steel and other alloys normally inert against the corrosion and high temperatures. Other high-temperature corrosions include high-temperature oxidation, sulfidation and carbonization. High temperature oxidation and other corrosion types are commonly modelled using the Deal-Grove model to account for diffusion and reaction processes.