Effect of Alloying with Rare-Earth Metals on the Degradation of Magnesium Alloys Studied Using a Combination of Isothermal Calorimetry and Pressure Measurements

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksArticle in conference proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Standard

Effect of Alloying with Rare-Earth Metals on the Degradation of Magnesium Alloys Studied Using a Combination of Isothermal Calorimetry and Pressure Measurements. / Wadsö, Lars; Hort, Norbert; Orlov, Dmytro.

Magnesium Technology 2019. ed. / Dmytro Orlov; Vineet V. Joshi; Neale R. Neelameggham; J. Brian Jordon. Cham : Springer International Publishing AG, 2019. p. 121-126 (Minerals, Metals and Materials Series).

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksArticle in conference proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Wadsö, L, Hort, N & Orlov, D 2019, Effect of Alloying with Rare-Earth Metals on the Degradation of Magnesium Alloys Studied Using a Combination of Isothermal Calorimetry and Pressure Measurements. in D Orlov, VV Joshi, NR Neelameggham & JB Jordon (eds), Magnesium Technology 2019. Minerals, Metals and Materials Series, Springer International Publishing AG, Cham, pp. 121-126, Magnesium Technology Symposium held at the 148th TMS Annual Meeting and Exhibition - TMS 2019, San Antonio, United States, 10.03.19. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-05789-3_19

APA

Wadsö, L., Hort, N., & Orlov, D. (2019). Effect of Alloying with Rare-Earth Metals on the Degradation of Magnesium Alloys Studied Using a Combination of Isothermal Calorimetry and Pressure Measurements. In D. Orlov, V. V. Joshi, N. R. Neelameggham, & J. B. Jordon (Eds.), Magnesium Technology 2019 (pp. 121-126). (Minerals, Metals and Materials Series). Springer International Publishing AG. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-05789-3_19

Vancouver

Wadsö L, Hort N, Orlov D. Effect of Alloying with Rare-Earth Metals on the Degradation of Magnesium Alloys Studied Using a Combination of Isothermal Calorimetry and Pressure Measurements. In Orlov D, Joshi VV, Neelameggham NR, Jordon JB, editors, Magnesium Technology 2019. Cham: Springer International Publishing AG. 2019. p. 121-126. (Minerals, Metals and Materials Series). Epub 2019 Feb 14. doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-05789-3_19

Bibtex

@inbook{e05738b214134984ba8eb220c83137c9,
title = "Effect of Alloying with Rare-Earth Metals on the Degradation of Magnesium Alloys Studied Using a Combination of Isothermal Calorimetry and Pressure Measurements",
abstract = "With all the versatility in structural performance and recent progress in developing magnesium alloys, their Achilles heel remains to be degradation or corrosion property. While applications in mobility demand corrosion protection by all means, bio-medical applications of Mg alloys require well-controlled degradation rates. Meeting these requirements is only possible through the understanding of phenomena on surface–environment interfaces and the characteristics of Mg alloys affecting them. In this study, in situ monitoring during immersion testing along with 3D-optical and scanning-electron microscopy were used for assessing structure-performance characteristics. The effect of alloying with rare-earth metals on the degradation of magnesium has been studied in three model alloys Mg–0.8Nd, Mg–0.2Zr and Mg–2.0Gd using a combination of isothermal calorimetry and pressure measurements. The combination appears to be a powerful method to study corrosion of magnesium. The degradation of the Gd-containing alloy is approximately 100 times that of the other two alloys studied and is associated with the release of heat and hydrogen gas in large quantities. Differences in the morphology of corrosion products on Mg–0.8Nd and Mg–0.2Zr alloy surfaces can be associated with minute variations in the degradation process detected by the developed method.",
keywords = "Degradation, Isothermal calorimetry, Magnesium alloys, Pressure measurements, Engineering",
author = "Lars Wads{\"o} and Norbert Hort and Dmytro Orlov",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-030-05789-3_19",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-3-030-05788-6",
series = "Minerals, Metals and Materials Series",
publisher = "Springer International Publishing AG",
pages = "121--126",
editor = "Dmytro Orlov and Joshi, {Vineet V.} and Neelameggham, {Neale R.} and Jordon, {J. Brian}",
booktitle = "Magnesium Technology 2019",
address = "Switzerland",
note = "Magnesium Technology Symposium held at the 148th TMS Annual Meeting and Exhibition - TMS 2019, TMS2019 ; Conference date: 10-03-2019 Through 14-03-2019",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Effect of Alloying with Rare-Earth Metals on the Degradation of Magnesium Alloys Studied Using a Combination of Isothermal Calorimetry and Pressure Measurements

AU - Wadsö, Lars

AU - Hort, Norbert

AU - Orlov, Dmytro

N1 - Conference code: 148

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - With all the versatility in structural performance and recent progress in developing magnesium alloys, their Achilles heel remains to be degradation or corrosion property. While applications in mobility demand corrosion protection by all means, bio-medical applications of Mg alloys require well-controlled degradation rates. Meeting these requirements is only possible through the understanding of phenomena on surface–environment interfaces and the characteristics of Mg alloys affecting them. In this study, in situ monitoring during immersion testing along with 3D-optical and scanning-electron microscopy were used for assessing structure-performance characteristics. The effect of alloying with rare-earth metals on the degradation of magnesium has been studied in three model alloys Mg–0.8Nd, Mg–0.2Zr and Mg–2.0Gd using a combination of isothermal calorimetry and pressure measurements. The combination appears to be a powerful method to study corrosion of magnesium. The degradation of the Gd-containing alloy is approximately 100 times that of the other two alloys studied and is associated with the release of heat and hydrogen gas in large quantities. Differences in the morphology of corrosion products on Mg–0.8Nd and Mg–0.2Zr alloy surfaces can be associated with minute variations in the degradation process detected by the developed method.

AB - With all the versatility in structural performance and recent progress in developing magnesium alloys, their Achilles heel remains to be degradation or corrosion property. While applications in mobility demand corrosion protection by all means, bio-medical applications of Mg alloys require well-controlled degradation rates. Meeting these requirements is only possible through the understanding of phenomena on surface–environment interfaces and the characteristics of Mg alloys affecting them. In this study, in situ monitoring during immersion testing along with 3D-optical and scanning-electron microscopy were used for assessing structure-performance characteristics. The effect of alloying with rare-earth metals on the degradation of magnesium has been studied in three model alloys Mg–0.8Nd, Mg–0.2Zr and Mg–2.0Gd using a combination of isothermal calorimetry and pressure measurements. The combination appears to be a powerful method to study corrosion of magnesium. The degradation of the Gd-containing alloy is approximately 100 times that of the other two alloys studied and is associated with the release of heat and hydrogen gas in large quantities. Differences in the morphology of corrosion products on Mg–0.8Nd and Mg–0.2Zr alloy surfaces can be associated with minute variations in the degradation process detected by the developed method.

KW - Degradation

KW - Isothermal calorimetry

KW - Magnesium alloys

KW - Pressure measurements

KW - Engineering

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85064667987&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1007/978-3-030-05789-3_19

DO - 10.1007/978-3-030-05789-3_19

M3 - Article in conference proceedings

AN - SCOPUS:85064667987

SN - 978-3-030-05788-6

T3 - Minerals, Metals and Materials Series

SP - 121

EP - 126

BT - Magnesium Technology 2019

A2 - Orlov, Dmytro

A2 - Joshi, Vineet V.

A2 - Neelameggham, Neale R.

A2 - Jordon, J. Brian

PB - Springer International Publishing AG

CY - Cham

T2 - Magnesium Technology Symposium held at the 148th TMS Annual Meeting and Exhibition - TMS 2019

Y2 - 10 March 2019 through 14 March 2019

ER -