Localized Corrosion of Inclusions in a Type 303 Stainless Steel Vending-Machine Valve
-
Published:2019
Abstract
After about two years in service, a 303 stainless steel valve in contact with a carbonated soft drink in a vending machine occasionally dispensed a discolored drink with a sulfide odor. According to the laboratory at the bottling plant, the soft drink in question was strongly acidic, containing citric and phosphoric acids and having a pH of 2.4 to 2.5. Investigation (visual inspection, chemical analysis, immersion testing in the soft drink, and 100x unetched micrographs) supported the conclusion that the failure was caused by the size and distribution of sulfide stringers in the alloy used in the valve. Manganese sulfide stringers in the valve were exposed at end-grain surfaces in contact with the beverage. The stringers, which were anodic to the surrounding metal, were subject to corrosion, producing a hydrogen sulfide concentration in the immediately adjacent liquid. Recommendations included changing the valve material to type 304 stainless steel.
Localized Corrosion of Inclusions in a Type 303 Stainless Steel Vending-Machine Valve, ASM Failure Analysis Case Histories: Design Flaws, ASM International, 2019, https://doi.org/10.31399/asm.fach.design.c0091358
Download citation file:
Oct. 28 – Nov. 1 | San Diego
Keep up-to-date at the premier event for the microelectronics failure analysis community. Register today for ISTFA 2024!