Electrochemical potentiodynamic reactivation: development and applications of the EPR test

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Trans Tech Publications

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Není ve fondu ÚK

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Abstract

The EPR test, designed to examine of the susceptibility to nonuniform, primarily intergranular corrosion, ranks among the more successful testing technique developments relating to stainless steels and alloys. One of its numerous advantages is that it lends itself to non-destructive, on-site examination. EPR enjoyed wide expansion over the years since first conceived by Cihal in 1969. Recent EPR measurements tend to focus on (1) double and/or single loop EPR as a modem technique used to establish the resistance of stainless steels and alloys to intergranular corrosion; (2) detecting integranular corrosion (IGC) and intergranular stress corrosion cracking (IGSCC) susceptibility in alloy steels and nickel alloys for nuclear engineering applications; and (3) studies of grain boundary precipitation and other minute local changes to alloy composition and structure.

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EPR test, stainless steels & alloys, sensitization, phase precipitation, intergranular corrosion, stress corrosion cracking, nuclear applications

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Advances in fracture and failure prevention : fifth International Conference on Fracture and Strength of Solids (FEOFS2003) & Second International Conference on Physics & Chemistry of Fracture and Failure Prevention (2nd ICPCF) , 20-22 Oct. 2003, Sendai, Japan. Proceedings. 2004, p. 855-864. Key engineering materials, vols. 261-263, pt. 2.