AndrewTT
Mechanical
- Jul 14, 2016
- 261
I have an assembly per the attached drawing: Screw - S304, middle component - Beryllium Nickel, lower component - S316. This assembly has been exposed to an electrolyte (salt). The tip of the screw has corroded away. I believe this to be Galvanic Corrosion (GC). When I research GC everything says that the anode will be corroded and the cathode protected.
The long term fix for me is to change the middle component material but I am also looking for a short term fix.
Questions:
1A) SS is more noble than Beryllium so the middle component should corrode and not the screw, correct?
1B) Can the screw be the anode even though it is the more noble material?
2A) If I put an insulator between the screw and the middle component will the GC just move to the middle and lower components?
2B) Which component will be the anode now, the middle component or the lower component?
3) It I put a ceramic coating on the screw and lower component (cannot coat the BeNi component) can I minimize the GC? Is a coating too thin to insulate?
4) When I run a salt exposure test consisting of many of these assemblies some of the screw tips are corroded away and some look almost pristine (about 60%/40%). Any idea why the amount of corrosion is so inconsistent?
Thank you very much!
The long term fix for me is to change the middle component material but I am also looking for a short term fix.
Questions:
1A) SS is more noble than Beryllium so the middle component should corrode and not the screw, correct?
1B) Can the screw be the anode even though it is the more noble material?
2A) If I put an insulator between the screw and the middle component will the GC just move to the middle and lower components?
2B) Which component will be the anode now, the middle component or the lower component?
3) It I put a ceramic coating on the screw and lower component (cannot coat the BeNi component) can I minimize the GC? Is a coating too thin to insulate?
4) When I run a salt exposure test consisting of many of these assemblies some of the screw tips are corroded away and some look almost pristine (about 60%/40%). Any idea why the amount of corrosion is so inconsistent?
Thank you very much!