Corrosion Resistance Mechanism in WC/FeCrNi Composites: Decoupling the Role of Spherical Versus Angular WC Morphologies
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Experimental Methodology
2.1. Materials Preparation
2.2. Characterization Techniques
2.3. Electrochemical Tests
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Phase Analysis of Five Samples
3.2. Microstructure Analysis
3.3. Electrochemical Measurements
3.3.1. The Effect of Adding CTC-A on the Open Circuit Potential of the Alloy
3.3.2. The Effect of Adding CTC-A on the Polarization of the Alloy
3.3.3. The Influence of the Addition of CTC-A on the Electrochemical Impedance of the Alloy
3.3.4. The Effect of Adding CTC-A on the Morphology of Corrosion Products of the Alloy
3.3.5. The Effect of the Addition of CTC-A on the Corrosion Mechanism of the Alloy
- (1)
- Passivation film formation stage (<500 s): The open-circuit potential rapidly shifts positively (Figure 8), driven by the preferential oxidation of Cr to Cr3+ in the FeCrNi matrix that forms initial Cr2O3 clusters (Figure 15). A high spherical WC content (sample #1: 40% CTC-S) accelerates dense film formation through its smooth surface and high dispersibility (lowest porosity ~1%, Table 3), as evidenced by the XPS showing 38% Cr3+ enrichment. This enables potential stabilization within ~5000 s (Figure 8) with the most noble Eoc (−0.348 V, Table 3). In contrast, a high angular WC (sample #5: 40% CTC-A) increases the porosity (~3%), while M7C3 carbides consume matrix Cr (XPS-confirmed Cr depletion), delaying stabilization (>5400 s) with the most active Eoc (−0.416 V, Table 3);
- (2)
- Passivation film stabilization stage: The Cr2O3 film functions as a charge-transfer barrier (Figure 10c equivalent circuit). sample #1 (40% spherical WC) exhibits superior film continuity (CPEα = 0.912, Table 4), yielding maximum charge-transfer resistance (Rp = 11.22 kΩ·cm2, Table 4) that suppresses the corrosion current (icorr = 0.152 μA·cm−2, Table 3) and Cl− penetration. sample #5 (40% angular WC) shows a degraded film integrity (CPEα = 0.828, Table 4) with minimal Rp (5.15 kΩ·cm2, Table 4), while microgalvanic cells (WC/matrix and M7C3/matrix) accelerate the charge transfer, increasing icorr to 1.120 μA·cm−2 (Table 3);
- (3)
- Passivation film dissolution stage: Under anodic polarization (Figure 9), sample #1’s Cr-rich film demonstrates exceptional dissolution resistance with a wide passive region (−300 to −200 mV) and minimal passive current density (ipass = 2.01 × 10−4 μA·cm−2, Table 3). Conversely, sample #5’s defective film dissolves readily, exhibiting disappearing passive region characteristics and current density surge (0.764 → 1.120 μA·cm−2 at 30 → 40% angular WC, Table 3), which is accompanied by severe surface spalling (Figure 13(c1,c2));
- (4)
- Passivation film breakdown stage: sample #1’s uniform film withstands transpassive dissolution (>−50 mV, Figure 9) with limited pitting (Figure 12(a1–a3)). sample #5’s angular WC triggers catastrophic failure: stress concentration at sharp corners initiates microcrack propagation along interfaces (Figure 13(c2)), while M7C3/matrix galvanic corrosion drives explosive pitting (Figure 13(c2) pits), which manifests as a current surge at low potentials (−0.05 V, Figure 9). This culminates in rapid material degradation through interconnected failure mechanisms.
- (1)
- The first mechanistic proof that angular WC’s corner dissolution (Figure 4b) triggers carbon-mediated Cr depletion at interfaces, reducing the passive film stability by 70.7% when exceeding 10 vol% (Rp drop: 11.42 → 3.35 kΩ·cm2, Table 5). This resolves long-standing debates on morphology-corrosion decoupling [5,10];
- (2)
- (3)
4. Conclusions
- (1)
- The open-circuit potential shows a decreasing trend with increases in the angular WC content. When the proportion of angular WC was increased from 0% to 40%, the open-circuit potential gradually decreased from −0.348 V (40% spherical WC for #1 sample) to −0.416 V (40% angular WC for #5 sample). This indicates that spherical WC shows good corrosion resistance by reducing the porosity and decreasing the contact area between the matrix and corrosive liquid;
- (2)
- The kinetic potential polarization test shows that there is a significant WC enhanced phase morphology dependence of the anodic process. When the content of angular WC was increased from 0% to 40%, the corrosion potential gradually decreased from −0.332 V to −0.431 V, and the corrosion current increased from 0.152 μA·cm−2 to 1.120 μA·cm−2, which indicated that the sharp edges of the angular WC might trigger localized pitting corrosion that leads to the deterioration of the passivation film. In turn this reduces the corrosion resistance of the composites;
- (3)
- EIS analysis showed a negative correlation between the passivation film resistance (Rp) and the content of angular WC, with the Rp reaching 11.42 kΩ·cm2 for sample #1 and decreasing to 3.35 kΩ·cm2 for sample #5 (a decrease of 70.7%). XPS confirmed that the spherical WC promotes the enrichment of Cr3+ (up to 38% of Cr2O3 for sample #1), and the proportion of FeO -OH reached 28.5%, leading to a decrease in the self-repairing ability of the passivation film and the deterioration of its material corrosion performance;
- (4)
- Future research guidelines: Based on the limitations identified in this study, two critical research directions are proposed: 1. Long-term corrosion behavior validation in simulated marine environments with synergistic erosion (sand particle concentration: 1–5 g/L) and microbial activity (SRB density: 104–106 cells/mL) to assess real-world durability. 2. High-temperature synchrotron XRD monitoring (20–1300 °C) of carbide transformation kinetics during SPS to establish time–temperature–transformation diagrams with the aim of achieving optimized phase control.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Element | C | Fe | Cr | Ni | Si | Mo | B | Mn |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Content | 0.48 | 69.42 | 17.13 | 3.20 | 2.79 | 0.69 | 5.86 | 0.42 |
Sample Number | CTC-S (Spherical WC) | CTC-A (Angular WC) | Fe-Based Alloy |
---|---|---|---|
#1 | 40 | 0 | 60 |
#2 | 30 | 10 | 60 |
#3 | 20 | 20 | 60 |
#4 | 10 | 30 | 60 |
#5 | 0 | 40 | 60 |
Sample | Eoc | βa | βc | jcorr | Ecorr | jpass |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number | (V vs. SCE) | mV/Decade | mV/Decade | (μA·cm−2) | (V vs. SCE) | (×10−4 μA·cm−2) |
#1 | −0.348 | 82.1 | 120.8 | 0.152 | −0.332 | 2.01 |
#2 | −0.361 | 79.4 | 135.4 | 0.213 | −0.351 | 1.34 |
#3 | −0.373 | 75.2 | 115.3 | 0.423 | −0.375 | |
#4 | −0.396 | 73.9 | 128.6 | 0.764 | −0.394 | |
#5 | −0.416 | 68.5 | 110.7 | 1.120 | −0.431 |
Sample | Rs | Rp | Cp | CPEp Parameter | Chi-Squared | SSQ | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number | (Ω·cm2) | (103Ω·cm2) | (10−3 mF·cm−2) | Y0 (10−3 Ω−1·sα·cm−2) | α | (10−3) | (10−3) |
#1 | 3.868 | 11.221 | 1.215 | 1.913 | 0.912 | 1.2 | 1.8 |
#2 | 3.676 | 10.883 | 1.818 | 1.744 | 0.880 | 0.9 | 1.7 |
#3 | 4.264 | 8.107 | 2.282 | 1.468 | 0.858 | 0.6 | 1.9 |
#4 | 4.613 | 6.332 | 2.671 | 1.245 | 0.835 | 1.1 | 1.5 |
#5 | 5.091 | 5.148 | 2.745 | 1.016 | 0.828 | 0.4 | 1.2 |
Element | C | O | Cl | Cr | Fe | Ni | W |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 10.81 | 43.41 | 5.63 | 8.87 | 27.81 | 1.99 | 1.48 |
2 | 11.61 | 44.2 | 6.87 | 8.56 | 26.48 | 0.35 | 1.93 |
3 | 13.66 | 50.63 | 0.12 | 12.81 | 19.12 | 0.54 | 3.11 |
4 | 46.44 | 15.03 | / | / | 3.16 | / | 35.37 |
Elemental | C | O | Cl | Cr | Fe | Ni | W |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 12.23 | 44.98 | 6.87 | 7.89 | 23.23 | 1.64 | 2.16 |
2 | 12.86 | 48.75 | 4.86 | 7.61 | 21.81 | 1.48 | 2.63 |
3 | 11.61 | 52.23 | 4.39 | 7.1 | 20.06 | 1.85 | 2.76 |
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Zeng, X.; Wang, R.; Tian, X.; Liu, Y. Corrosion Resistance Mechanism in WC/FeCrNi Composites: Decoupling the Role of Spherical Versus Angular WC Morphologies. Metals 2025, 15, 777. https://doi.org/10.3390/met15070777
Zeng X, Wang R, Tian X, Liu Y. Corrosion Resistance Mechanism in WC/FeCrNi Composites: Decoupling the Role of Spherical Versus Angular WC Morphologies. Metals. 2025; 15(7):777. https://doi.org/10.3390/met15070777
Chicago/Turabian StyleZeng, Xiaoyi, Renquan Wang, Xin Tian, and Ying Liu. 2025. "Corrosion Resistance Mechanism in WC/FeCrNi Composites: Decoupling the Role of Spherical Versus Angular WC Morphologies" Metals 15, no. 7: 777. https://doi.org/10.3390/met15070777
APA StyleZeng, X., Wang, R., Tian, X., & Liu, Y. (2025). Corrosion Resistance Mechanism in WC/FeCrNi Composites: Decoupling the Role of Spherical Versus Angular WC Morphologies. Metals, 15(7), 777. https://doi.org/10.3390/met15070777