Chapter 6 Automotive Corrosion due to Build-up of the Micro-climate Fig. 6.1c When plants photosynthesize sugars from carbon dioxide and water, oxygen is given off. This oxygen does not accelerate the corrosion rate of the car when it is parked over grass or under trees. The trees and grass will produce a higher humidity which affects drying and allows the winter de-icing salts to absorb water. Fig 6.1b The earth contains magnetic North and South poles. Some engineers postulate that it is the car cutting this magnetic filed which acts as a small generator or dynamo. The electric current generated is considered as the cause of corrosion. Fig 6.1a A metal is not porous, nor does it sweat water. Corrosion is not due to residual root from previous recycled corroded vehicles. 6.2 Demonstration of the battery process the differential aeration cell This potential difference or voltage of the equivalent battery due to the difference in the oxygen availability can be shown by taking two pieces of steel and immersing them in a salt solution as shown in Fig. 6.4. The two pieces of steel are connected to a potential- measuring instrument a digital voltmeter (DVM). One side of the U-tube is oxygenated by blowing air through the liquid, while the other side remains relatively de-oxygenated. The cotton wool prevents the two liquid from mixing, while at the same time allowing the corrosion process to take place between the two liquids in either arm. Potential reversals or anodes changing to cathodes and vice versa may be obtained depending on which arm is oxygenated. For this reason the cell or battery is called the differential aeration cell. Chapter 6 Automotive Corrosion due to Build-up of the Micro-climate Fig. 6.2 Two pieces of mild steel connected to a DVM and immersed in a saline electrolyte which is oxygenated differentially will show a potential difference. 6.3 Where are these cells and their electrodes (equivalent batteries) These cells form short-circuited batteries because the car body is one integral electrical conductor, which is unlike the two pieces of steel used above. These equivalent batteries occur at all places where there is a difference in the availability of oxygen. Chapter 6 Automotive Corrosion due to Build-up of the Micro-climate Fig. 6.3 Schematic view of the road de-icing salts (a) on the surface of the car body, (b) absorbing water from the atmosphere to form the differential aeration cell and (c) concentrating at the base of the road aggregate on drying. (d) the short circuited equivalent battery is generated by the difference in oxygen availability. The oxygenated region is the cathode; the deoxygenated region and the area which dissolves is anode. (e) The corrosion (metal penetration by pitting) is initiated owing to the lack of oxygen replenishment beneath these deposits. (f) A stone chip doesnt cause severe corrosion in the early stages of life (Why?). 6.3 Where are these cells and their electrodes (equivalent batteries) The equivalent batteries can be formed at the following locations. 1)Area of bad design as they harbour road dirt which restrict natural drying. (corrosion can only proceed in the presence of a moist environment. Bad design, in the corrosion sense, is any design which allows the accumulation) of a corrosive micro0climate, the presence of which the lay public are unaware of but the motor manufacturers should be aware of in view of their expertise in the subject matter. 2) Beneath road dust dirt (Fig 6.3a) or other surface deposits. 3) In inter-welds or clinch flanges or hemming folds. These also form stagnant liquid environments which presents a small liquid surface to the atmosphere and so drying by evaporation is severely restricted. More importantly, oxygen replenishment at the metal surface which is furthest from the liquid surface is restricted or denied. 4) Beneath mud poultices or layers 5) At the corrosion front or pit which will explain the localized pitting nature and speed of rust through corrosion. This is often termed inside-out corrosion owing to the fact that it is initiated by the deposition of salts on the inner panels of box members which then corrode through by the localized pitting to the outer surface. 6) Beneath non-adherent but coherent surface coatings 7) At threaded screw sections. Corrosion here means that very high torques have to be applied to loosen corroded studs. Chapter 6 Automotive Corrosion due to Build-up of the Micro-climate More technical chapters are intended for further studying to bring the students up to a greater understanding of motor vehicle corrosion in conjunction with the associated chemical and physical sciences. The remainder of this section poses some questions and their answers are given in section Chapter 9 Motor vehicle corrosion is the application of the differential aeration cell to the micro- climate which forms during the life of the vehicle. This micro-climate becomes a free-rider and the subsequent sections will develop a theory which will enables the starter to understanding and even to predict the area of corrosion. In order to test and concentrate your mind the following questions are concerned with Fig. 6.3 Fig. 6.3(b) shows the road de-icing salt adsorbing atmospheric water. Fig. 6.3(c) gives a schematic view of the road de-icing salts concentrating at the base of the road aggregate, which helps to fix the aggressive saline environment upon vertical surfaces. The liquid envelop which is produced by the uptake of water on humid days is also shown. As an exercise, try to indicate which is the region or area which has most oxygen replenishment. Fig. 6.3(d) shows the short circuit which is developed by this form of corrosion. There is no way of breaking this electrical circuit as there was in the case of the torch battery and circuit. Fig. 6.3(e) shows diagrammatically the difference between internally initiated pitting corrosion, causing metal penetration, and scab corrosion (surface corrosion beneath a painted surface). Indicate which are the areas of oxygen denudation on Fig. 6.3(e). Chapter 6 Automotive Corrosion due to Build-up of the Micro-climate Fig. 6.3(f) also shows diagrammatically the effect of a stone chip on the paintwork of a vehicle. Such paint chipping is relatively harmless. Why? This is because the metal surface is subjected to an equal amount of oxygen and so the corrosion battery gives zero potential difference, i.e., it is like a run-down battery lifeless. What will happen if the corrosion process starts to undercut the paint film as shown in Figs 8.18 and 8.12? There will be a voltage generated as the area beneath the paint film will be denuded of oxygen. Fig. 6.4 shows an overlap produced by a bolted or inter-weld section of the motor vehicle. Crevices can be formed whenever two materials are joined. Chapter 6 Corrosion mechanism and build-up of the micro-climate Fig. 6.4 There are two surfaces to a metal inter-weld or overlap which can be formed either by a bolted arrangement or by resistance spot welding. 6.4 How can this corrosion be stopped? The battery in the toy to torch is switched off to stop the flow of electricity and so prevents the unnecessary run-down of the battery. This breaks the metallic part of the circuit. This method of switching off the corrosion process is not available in the case of the motor car, because to use it we would have to cut the car up. In corrosion the flow of electricity by electrical charges (called electrons) in the metal must be balanced by the flow of charged entities in electrolyte or liquid environment (the salt droplet). Therefore, if there is no water environment outside the metal, there can be no flow of these charged entities and so there is no corrosion. Hence, if one uses the same concept in the case of the motor car, we must isolate the metal surface from the agent causing the corrosion, i.e., the electrolyte which contains the road de-icing salts in solution. This isolation means that we shall be looking for a physical barrier such as a paint film. However, a painted film is permeable to both water and oxygen, and so does not function when wet for long periods and breaks down beneath mud poultices. There are four options open to stop corrosion. 1) Keep the vehicle dry, thus breaking the contact in the liquid environment, and/or prevent stagnant deoxygenated water from forming a water trap. 2) Have a highly electrically insulating film on the metal to separate the metal from the environment. This is one of the functions of a paint film 3) Keep the vehicle clean, thus eliminating road de-icing salts which are naturally hygroscopic and absorb water from the atmosphere. The presence of chlorides can Chapter 6 Corrosion mechanism and build-up of the micro-climate accelerate the breakdown of the protective paint film and destroy the effectiveness of any corrosion inhibitors and allow corrosion to proceed. 4) Ensure equal oxygen supply or replenishment at all surfaces. This cannot be achieved with the restriction placed on motor vehicle manufacturing methods. One of the functions of a paint film is to provide a uniform oxygen replenishment over the whole metallic surface. This area will be discussed again later with more details. Vehicle design and corrosion protection are inter-related properties and one cannot be achieved without the other. 6.5 Road Spray, Mud Compaction and Momentum In order to understand how a motor vehicle corrodes, it is necessary to understand something about the spray generated by a vehicle moving at speed along a wet road. The tyre effectively recycles the rain and increase any affect due to rain. The origin of the water spray is given in Fig. 6.5 Chapter 6 Corrosion causing by build-up of the micro-climate Fig 6.5 Analysis of spray generation It is helpful to define the size of a spray droplet by its momentum. The particle size, and hence momentum in the spray generated by a rotating wheel, is small the faster the speed of the car (see the Table). The size of droplet, often termed a microdroplet, is given in the literature as varying inversely with the third power of the vehicle speed. Hence a car travelling at 60 mph creates a very fine spraying of mud and water. For this high velocity water spray to form a microdroplet, nature dictates, by the surface free energy theory, that there must be a nucleus upon which the water can form its droplet. The nucleus acting for micro-droplet formation is road dirt, which may be worn road surfaces, tyre dust and de- icing salts. The small amount of water present upon each road dirt particle will have been observed on motorway of free-way driving, where there is often insufficient water for the wiper blades to clear the windscreen. Chapter 6 Corrosion causing by build-up of the micro-climate larger Low speed small High speed Momentum Ratio of Water/Dirt The lower water content of each microplet also means that the associated road dirt is artificially densely compacted by the phenomenon of surface tension into a high density mud pocket upon ledges or in areas which are out of the way of direct washes from the wheel, a steam cleaner or a garden hose. To summarize: the slower the car travels, the larger will be these water droplets and the higher the ratio of water vs dirt which they can contain. The faster the car travels, the smaller will be these spray droplets and the less water they can contain. The wheel spray from slowly moving vehicles has a high momentum and so travels in straighter lines. The spray is not affected by pressure eddies beneath the car body. Summary Road dirt throw off the tyre from any point will impact the car body at the vehicle speed. Road dirt is thrown forward of the vehicle and will collect over lights, air vent pipes to petrol tank and inlet hose and associate ledges. The faster the vehicle speed, the less water is associated with the dirt and the more the dirt is compacted. The faster the vehicle speed, the less is the momentum of the road dirt and the more likely it is to alter direction in the pressure eddies around car. The vehicle traveling at speed produces various pressure eddies which result in turbulence beneath and alongside the vehicle. It is the turbulence which causes the micro-climate to build-up in box members. Chapter 6 Corrosion causing by build-up of the micro-climate