Laboratory for analysis and expertise

EDF characterization: identifying the origin of industrial corrosion

Quickly identify the origin of industrial corrosion

Corrosion observed on a part, assembly, or coating intended for the energy sector can compromise compliance, service life, and operational safety. Our approach to EDF Characterization aims to determine the origin of the corrosion in a factual way, based on surface observations, chemical analysis, and targeted tests. The goal is to distinguish pitting, galvanic, crevice, or general corrosion, identify any oxidizing agents, deposits, or contamination, and link the results to the material, manufacturing process, or exposure environment.

Observe corrosion and failure mechanisms

The assessment may include fractographic analysis to classify a brittle, ductile, or fatigue fracture, as well as observation of the fracture surface to highlight the contribution of corrosion. Comparisons between sound and failed areas are carried out through microstructure and hardness analysis. Observations using optical microscopy and SEM-EDX make it possible to examine cracks, irregularities, wear, localized attack, and corrosion products. The composition of the metal part can also be verified by ICP and elemental analysis to confirm the grade and compliance with specifications.

Carry out electrochemical and accelerated aging tests

To anticipate corrosion phenomena before industrialization, the laboratory carries out electrochemical tests adapted to metallic materials and protective coatings. Measurements of open-circuit potential (OCV), corrosion rate (LSV), electrochemical impedance (EIS), and galvanic coupling make it possible to assess a material’s sensitivity to its environment, detect coating defects, and study the uniformity of protective layers. Salt spray and accelerated aging tests complete the performance assessment.

Complementary analytical tools for a multi-scale reading

The assessment relies on a set of complementary technical resources: FEG-SEM, SEM-EDX, FEG-SEM-EDX, optical microscope, ICP-AES, XPS, XRD, AFM, roughness meter, durometer, potentiostat, elemental analysis C/S, N/O, H, and salt spray tests. This combination makes it possible to observe surface morphology, identify the composition of deposits and corrosion products, measure layer thickness or uniformity, assess the metallurgical condition, and study the electrochemical behavior of the material/coating/environment system.

Multi-technique expertise to qualify materials, coatings, and deposits

The laboratory supports manufacturers from failure investigation through to validation of corrosion resistance before industrialization. The analysis combine metallographic observations, surface characterization, semi-quantitative identification of corrosion products, and electrochemical testing. This approach makes it possible to understand an observed defect, verify the uniformity of a surface treatment, measure coating thickness loss, and assess how a part performs in simulated environments. For related issues, it is also possible to explore the characterization of a deposit or contamination or investigate a case of premature corrosion on new piping.

Characterize the surface, layers, and deposits

For coated or treated parts, surface analysis are used to confirm the chemical nature of the layers, verify their uniformity, and detect delamination, coating failure, or adhesion defects. Investigations may use XPS, SEM-EDX, XRD, AFM, a roughness meter, and microsection analysis. This approach is particularly useful for linking corrosion to treatment heterogeneity, thickness loss, or surface contamination. Depending on the need, a material characterization study can complement the investigation to secure the interpretation.

Simulate representative service environments

Tests can be carried out in specific media to reproduce conditions close to actual use: seawater, extreme pH, the presence of inhibitors, or other aggressive environments. This comparative approach helps select a more robust grade, coating, paint, or surface treatment. It also makes it possible to rank several technical solutions before final qualification. In addition, certain material issues can be linked to a thermal characterization of materials by DSC when the overall behavior of the material needs to be consolidated.

Why choose Filab for decision-oriented corrosion characterization

Filab supports manufacturers with a problem-solving and technical validation approach. The laboratory steps in to quickly determine the corrosion origin, verify the compliance of a part or process, and secure material choices before integration into sensitive equipment. This ability to connect observations, analysis, and tests makes it possible to turn analytical results into operational decisions: confirm a grade, correct a surface treatment, qualify a coating, or adjust specifications. The laboratory also holds COFRAC accreditation for a publicly available scope and can support both R&D and production quality control.

Start an investigation and risk-mitigation process

After corrosion has been identified, it is important to preserve representative areas, document the conditions under which it appeared, provide the material and coating specifications, and then have the part analyzed according to a suitable investigation plan. The laboratory can then compare sound and degraded areas, identify corrosive agents, verify the compliance of the grade and surface treatment, and propose the additional tests needed to confirm the failure scenario. The approach can ultimately be extended through comparative testing to validate, anticipate, secure, and reliably support future industrial choices.

Frequently asked questions

How can you identify the origin of corrosion on an industrial part intended for use in a power plant?

Identifying the source of corrosion relies on a cross-disciplinary expert strategy: observation of the affected areas and attack patterns, analysis of the material composition, chemical characterization of deposits or oxide layers, study of the coating, and electrochemical testing where necessary. This methodology makes it possible to trace back to the likely cause of the failure and guide corrective actions on the material grade, surface treatment, process, or operating conditions.

Which analysis help understand a corrosion phenomenon on metal or coating?

The most relevant analysis are those that combine morphology, composition, and electrochemical behavior. In practice, SEM-EDX observation, metallography, ICP, XPS, XRD, and hardness measurements make it possible to identify the corrosion mode, the nature of deposits, the condition of the coating, and the conformity of the material.

How can corrosion resistance be validated before commissioning or industrialization?

Validation is based on tests that reproduce the chemical and electrochemical stresses expected in service. The results make it possible to objectively compare several materials or processes, detect weaknesses before industrial deployment, and reduce the risk of failure in operation.

What technical resources are used for a complete corrosion investigation at FILAB laboratory?

A complete corrosion investigation mobilizes observation techniques, chemical analysis, metallography, and electrochemical testing. The value of this multi-technique approach is that it goes beyond visual inspection to establish a well-supported diagnosis that can be used by production, quality, or R&D teams.

What should be done after corrosion has been identified on a part or coating?

A structured investigation should be launched to identify the root cause, define the extent of the defect, and determine corrective actions. Depending on the case, this may lead to changes in the material, coating, manufacturing process, storage conditions, or operating environment.
The filab advantages
A highly qualified team
A highly qualified team
Responsiveness in responding to and processing requests
Responsiveness in responding to and processing requests
A COFRAC ISO 17025 accredited laboratory
A COFRAC ISO 17025 accredited laboratory
(Staves available on www.cofrac.com - Accreditation number: 1-1793)
A complete analytical facility of 5,200m²
A complete analytical facility of 5,200m²
Tailor-made support
Tailor-made support
Video debriefing available with the expert
Video debriefing available with the expert
Clément BOENARD Head of Inorganic Chemistry Department
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