Biofilm effect on the cathodic and anodic processes on stainless steel in seawater near the corrosion potential. Part 2 : oxygen reduction on passive metal
The electrochemical behavior of stainless steel in both abiotic
and biotic seawater is studied and compared to the behavior
of a gold electrode in the same environments. The distinction
between stoichiometry and thermodynamics on one hand
and mechanism and kinetics on the other hand is highlighted.
The biofilm does not seem to directly affect the oxygen
reduction process near the oxygen equilibrium potential
and far from the oxygen diffusion-limit current. Also, hydrogen
peroxide (H2O2) and manganese oxides do not seem to
play a direct role at potentials > 300 mV vs saturated
calomel electrode (SCE) in the oxygen reduction process. The
oxidation of the organic material present in the biofouling
with currents able to affect the value of the passive material
corrosion potential is highlighted. The oxidation of the organic
material in the biofouling at the surface is characterized
by anodic currents with the same order of magnitude of
the anodic currents corresponding to passive currents or
higher. The oxidation of the organic material seems to affect
the value of the corrosion potential of the complex electrode
system comprising metal/passive film/biofouling/seawater.
The oxidation of the organic material lowers the pH at the
near-electrode surface, and it contributes to enhancing the
kinetics of the oxygen reduction and to increasing the corrosion
potential. The anodic oxidation of the same organic material
gives an anodic process that must be added to the
metal dissolution, and it contributes to lowering the measured
corrosion potential. The role of the passive film is underlined,
and its indirect effect on the mechanism of oxygen reduction
through the dissociative adsorption of water is suggested
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