Effect of Secondary Phase Precipitation on the Corrosion Behavior of Duplex Stainless Steels

Materials (Basel). 2014 Jul 22;7(7):5268-5304. doi: 10.3390/ma7075268.

Abstract

Duplex stainless steels (DSSs) with austenitic and ferritic phases have been increasingly used for many industrial applications due to their good mechanical properties and corrosion resistance in acidic, caustic and marine environments. However, DSSs are susceptible to intergranular, pitting and stress corrosion in corrosive environments due to the formation of secondary phases. Such phases are induced in DSSs during the fabrication, improper heat treatment, welding process and prolonged exposure to high temperatures during their service lives. These include the precipitation of sigma and chi phases at 700-900 °C and spinodal decomposition of ferritic grains into Cr-rich and Cr-poor phases at 350-550 °C, respectively. This article gives the state-of the-art review on the microstructural evolution of secondary phase formation and their effects on the corrosion behavior of DSSs.

Keywords: critical pitting temperature; duplex stainless steel; intergranular corrosion; nitride; sigma phase; spinodal decomposition; stress corrosion; welding.

Publication types

  • Review