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UNS N08020
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Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 13C
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 January 2006
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v13c.a0004186
EISBN: 978-1-62708-184-9
... (10 mils/yr) corrosion rate between 90 and 150 °C (195 and 300 °F). Fig. 3 Corrosion behavior of various stainless steels in 105% superphosphoric acid Superaustenitic Stainless Steels The alloy 20Cb-3 (UNS N08020), 20Mo-4 (UNS N08024), and 20Mo-6 (UNS N08026) stainless steels show...
Abstract
Phosphoric acid is less corrosive than sulfuric and hydrochloric acids. This article discusses the corrosion rates of metal alloys in phosphoric acid, including aluminum, carbon steel and cast irons, stainless steels, nickel-rich G-type alloys, copper and copper alloys, nickel alloys, lead, titanium alloys, and zirconium alloys. Nonmetallic materials may be chemically attacked in some corrosive environments, which can result in swelling, hardening, or softening phenomena; extraction of ingredients; chemical conversion of the nonmetallic constituents; cross-linking oxidation; and/or substitution reactions. The article also describes the corrosion resistance of nonmetallic materials such as rubber and elastomeric materials, plastics, carbon and graphite, and ceramic materials.
Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 13A
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 January 2003
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v13a.a0003676
EISBN: 978-1-62708-182-5
... … 0.015 P, 0.010 S N07750 X-750 bal 14.0–17.0 … 5.0–9.0 … … … 0.9 2.5 … … … … … … N07754 MA 754 78 19.0–23.0 … 1 … … … … 0.5 0.3 0.05 … … … 0.6 yttrium oxide N08020 20Cb-3 32.0–38.0 19.0–21.0 3.0–4.0 bal … 2.0–3.0 … 1 … … 0.07 2 1 … … N08024...
Abstract
Stainless steels and nickel-base alloys are recognized for their resistance to general corrosion and other categories of corrosion. This article examines the effects of specific alloying elements, metallurgical structure, and mechanical conditioning on corrosion resistance of these materials. It provides information on the compositions of selected stainless steels, copper-nickel, and nickel-base alloys in a tabular form. The article also illustrates the compositional and property linkages for stainless steels and nickel-base alloys.
Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 13C
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 January 2006
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v13c.a0004181
EISBN: 978-1-62708-184-9
... resistance, as mentioned previously, while resistance increases in alloys containing higher nickel and molybdenum contents. Some other higher-nickel alloys, such as 20Cb-3 (UNS N08020) and 825 (UNS N08825), with their high nickel content (32 to 42%), 2 to 3% Mo, and 3 to 4% Cu, resist HCl at all...
Abstract
Hydrochloric acid (HCl) may contain traces of impurities that will change the aggressiveness of the solution. This article discusses the effects of impurities such as fluorides, ferric salts, cupric salts, chlorine, and organic solvents, in HCl. It describes the corrosion resistance of various metals and alloys in HCl, including carbon and alloy steels, austenitic stainless steels, standard ferritic stainless steels, nickel and nickel alloys, copper and copper alloys, corrosion-resistant cast iron, zirconium, titanium and titanium alloys, tantalum and its alloys, and noble metals. The article illustrates the effect of HCl on nonmetallic materials such as natural rubber, neoprene, thermoplastics, and reinforced thermoset plastics. It also tabulates the corrosion of various metals in dry hydrogen chloride.
Book Chapter
Book: Corrosion: Materials
Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 13B
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 January 2005
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v13b.a0003817
EISBN: 978-1-62708-183-2
..., this indicates the presence of protective films, then their breakdown at critical temperatures. The performance of Ultimet alloy in sulfuric acid is approximately equivalent to those of the 6 wt% Mo stainless steels and 20Cb-3 alloy (UNS N08020). Its performance is below that of the Ni-Cr-Mo (C-type) alloys...
Abstract
This article addresses the cobalt and cobalt-base alloys most suited for aqueous environments and those suited for high temperatures. The performance of cobalt alloys in aqueous environments encountered in commercial applications is discussed. The article provides information on the environmental cracking resistance of the cobalt alloys. Three welding processes that are used for hardfacing with the high-carbon Co-Cr-W alloys, namely, oxyacetylene, gas tungsten arc, and plasma-transferred arc are also discussed. The article examines the effects of various modes of high-temperature corrosion. It describes the applications and fabrication of cobalt alloys for high-temperature service.
Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 6
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 January 1993
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v06.a0001410
EISBN: 978-1-62708-173-3
...–0.60 Nb 20Cb-3 N08020 0.07 2.00 1.00 19.0–21.0 32.0–38.0 0.045 0.035 2.0–3.0 Mo; 3.0–4.0 Cu; 8 × %C min to 1.00 max Nb 20Mo-4 N08024 0.03 1.00 0.50 22.5–25.0 35.0–40.0 0.035 0.035 3.50–5.00 Mo; 0.50–1.50 Cu; 0.15–0.35 Nb 20Mo-6 N08026 0.03 1.00 0.50 22.00–26.00 33.00...
Abstract
Austenitic stainless steels exhibit a single-phase, face-centered cubic structure that is maintained over a wide range of temperatures. This article reviews the compositions of standard and nonstandard austenitic stainless steels. It summarizes the important aspects of solidification behavior and microstructural evolution that dictate weld-metal ferrite content and morphology. The article describes weld defect formation, namely, solidification cracking, heat-affected zone liquation cracking, weld-metal liquation cracking, copper contamination cracking, ductility dip cracking, and weld porosity. It discusses four general types of corrosive attack: intergranular attack, stress-corrosion cracking, pitting and crevice corrosion, and microbiologically influenced corrosion. The article concludes with information on weld thermal treatments such as preheat and interpass heat treatments and postweld heat treatment.
Book Chapter
Series: ASM Desk Editions
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 December 1998
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.mhde2.a0003115
EISBN: 978-1-62708-199-3
.... Modifications of the basic grades use two digits other than zeroes. For stainless steels that contain high nickel contents (∼25 to 35% Ni), the UNS designation consists of the letter N followed by a five-digit number. Examples include N08020 (20Cb-3), N08024 (20Mo-4), N08026 (20Mo-6), N08366 (AL-6X), and N08367...
Abstract
Stainless steels are iron-base alloys containing minimum of approximately 11% Cr, and owing to its excellent corrosion resistance, are used for wide range of applications. These applications include nuclear reactor vessels, heat exchangers, oil industry tubular, chemical processing components, pulp and paper industries, furnace parts, and boilers used in fossil fuel electric power plants. The article provides a brief introduction on corrosion resistance of wrought stainless steel and its designations. It lists the chemical composition and describes the physical and mechanical properties of five major stainless steel families, of which four are based on the crystallographic structure of the alloys, including martensitic, ferritic, austenitic, or duplex. The fifth is precipitation-hardenable alloys, based on the type of heat treatment used. The article further discusses the factors in the selection of stainless steel, namely corrosion resistance, fabrication characteristics, product forms, thermally induced embrittlement, mechanical properties in specific temperature ranges, and product cost.
Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 13C
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 January 2006
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v13c.a0004179
EISBN: 978-1-62708-184-9
... chromium content that have been used in various HNO 3 applications include alloy 20 (N08020), G30 (N06030), alloy 33 (R20033), alloy 28 (N08028), alloy 22 (N06022), and alloy 625 (N06625). The nickel-base alloys that are essentially chromium-free, such as alloys 200 (N02200), 400 (N04400), B2 (N10665...
Abstract
Nitric acid is a strongly oxidizing acid that is aggressively corrosive to many metals. Its oxidizing nature is affected by acid temperature and concentration, and composition of the alloy exposed to it. This article focuses on the corrosion behavior of various ferrous and nonferrous metals and alloys when exposed to a nitric acid environment. The ferrous and nonferrous metals and alloys discussed are carbon and alloy steels, stainless steels, aluminum alloys, titanium, zirconium alloys, niobium and tantalum, and nonmetallic materials.
Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 18
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 31 December 2017
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v18.a0006372
EISBN: 978-1-62708-192-4
... 316 Annealed 82 HRB 48 7 Cold drawn 27 HRC 35 5 Type 303 Annealed 85 HRB 138 20 Type 201 Annealed 95 HRB 104 15 N08020 Annealed 87 HRB 14 2 Martensitic S42010 Tempered at 204 °C (400 °F) 50 HRC 104 (a) 15 (a) Tempered at 260 °C (500 °F) 47 HRC 62 9...
Abstract
Stainless steels are characterized as having relatively poor wear resistance and tribological properties, but they are often required for a particular application because of their corrosion resistance. This article describes the classification of stainless steels and wear. Stainless steels have been classified by microstructure and are categorized as austenitic, martensitic, ferritic, or duplex. The main categories of wear are related to abrasion, erosion, adhesive wear, and surface fatigue. The article presents a list that proposes the alloy family that could be the optimal selection for a particular wear mode. The corrosion modes include dry sliding, tribocorrosion, erosion, erosion-corrosion, cavitation, dry erosion, erosion-oxidation, galling and fretting.
Book: Machining
Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 16
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 January 1989
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v16.a0002180
EISBN: 978-1-62708-188-7
... … … 10 × C-1.10 Nb S34723 (347FSe) 0.08 2.00 1.00 0.11–0.17 0.030 17.00–19.00 9.00–12.00 … … 10 × C-1.10 Nb; 0.15–0.35 Se S38400 384 0.08 2.00 1.00 0.045 0.030 15.00–17.00 17.00–19.00 … … … N08020 … 0.07 2.00 1.00 0.045 0.035 19.00–21.00 32.00–38.00 2.00–3.00 … 8...
Abstract
The machinability of stainless steels varies from low to very high, depending on the final choice of the alloy. This article discusses general material and machining characteristics of stainless steel. It briefly describes the classes of stainless steel, such as ferritic, martensitic, austenitic, duplex, and precipitation-hardenable alloys. The article examines the role of additives, such as sulfur, selenium, tellurium, lead, bismuth, and certain oxides, in improving machining performance. It provides ways to minimize difficulties involved in the traditional machining of stainless steels. The article describes turning, drilling, tapping, milling, broaching, reaming, and grinding operations on stainless steel. It concludes with information on some of the nontraditional machining techniques, including abrasive jet machining, abrasive waterjet machining electrochemical machining, electron beam machining, and plasma arc machining.
Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 1
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 January 1990
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v01.a0001046
EISBN: 978-1-62708-161-0
...–0.4 Ti; 0.005 N; 0.05 Co 18-18-2 (XM-15) S38100 0.08 2.00 1.5–2.5 17.0–19.0 17.5–18.5 0.030 0.030 … 19-9 DL S63198 0.28–0.35 0.75–1.50 0.03–0.8 18.0–21.0 8.0–11.0 0.040 0.030 1.0–1.75 Mo; 0.1–0.35 Ti; 1.0–1.75 W; 0.25–0.60 Nb 20Cb-3 N08020 0.07 2.00 1.00 19.0–21.0 32.0...
Abstract
This article discusses the composition, characteristics, and properties of the five groups of wrought stainless steels: martensitic stainless steels, ferritic stainless steels, austenitic stainless steels, duplex stainless steels, and precipitation-hardening stainless steels. The selection of stainless steels may be based on corrosion resistance, fabrication characteristics, availability, mechanical properties in specific temperature ranges and product cost. The fabrication characteristics of stainless steels include formability, forgeability, machinability, and weldability. The product forms of wrought stainless steels are plate, sheet, strip, foil, bar, wire, semifinished products, pipes, tubes, and tubing. The article describes tensile properties, elevated-temperature properties, subzero-temperature properties, physical properties, corrosion properties, and fatigue strength of stainless steels. It characterizes the experience of a few industrial sectors according to the corrosion problems most frequently encountered and suggests appropriate grade selections. Corrosion testing, surface finishing, mill finishes, and interim surface protection of stainless steels are also discussed.
Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 13C
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 January 2006
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v13c.a0004182
EISBN: 978-1-62708-184-9
...-rich and nickel-base alloys. Source: Ref 3 Group Alloys A N02200, N06030, N06600, N06985, N08007, N08020, N08825 B N06022, N06059, N06200, N06686, N10276, N10665, N10675, N26455, N26022, N30007, N30107 C Carbon steel (a) D C70600, C71500, N04400, N24135, P00020, P04995...
Abstract
This article provides the corrosion data for materials in hydrofluoric acid (HF) and anhydrous hydrogen fluoride (AHF). These materials include carbon and low-alloy steels, austenitic stainless steels, nickel-rich austenitic stainless steels, nickel and nickel-base alloys, copper alloys, precious metals, and non-metals. The article also discusses the hydrogen blistering and stress-corrosion cracking of carbon steels in high-temperature HF and AHF.
Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 4D
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 October 2014
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v04d.a0005990
EISBN: 978-1-62708-168-9
...–2.5 Mo; 0.1–0.4 Ti; 0.005 N; 0.05 Co 18-18-2 (XM-15) S38100 0.08 2.00 1.5–2.5 17.0–19.0 17.5–18.5 0.030 0.030 … 19-9 DL S63198 0.28–0.35 0.75–1.50 0.03–0.8 18.0–21.0 8.0–11.0 0.040 0.030 1.0–1.75 Mo; 0.1–0.35 Ti; 1.0–1.75 W; 0.25–0.60 Nb 20Cb-3 N08020 0.07 2.00 1.00...
Abstract
This article provides information on the metallurgy of austenitic stainless steels, and the formation of their intermediate phases (Sigma, Chi, and Laves). It discusses sensitization, a major problem associated with the austenitics, and solutions to avoid the problem. The article describes heat treatments applied to austenitic stainless steels, namely, soaking for homogenization and preparation for hot working; annealing to remove the effects of cold work and to put alloying elements into solid solution; and stress relieving. It provides information on the stabilizing anneal process, which is conducted on stabilized alloys, and discusses the metallurgical characteristics of austenitic stainless steels that may affect the selection of a stress-relieving treatment and prevention of stress corrosion by stress relieving. The article also discusses the heat treatments applied to duplex stainless steels, which involve soaking and annealing, achieving the austenite-ferrite balance, precipitation of intermetallics, and alpha prime precipitation.
Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 13A
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 January 2003
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v13a.a0003664
EISBN: 978-1-62708-182-5
...-A) … (a) Ferric sulfate (A 262-B) 120 0.1 (4) S32100 Type 321 1 h at 675 °C (1250 °F) Nitric acid (A-262-C) 240 0.05 (2) S34700 Type 347 1 h at 675 °C (1250 °F) Nitric acid (A 262-C) 240 0.05 (2) N08020 20Cb-3 1 h at 675 °C (1250 °F) Ferric sulfate (G 28-A) 120 0.05 (2) N08904 904L...
Abstract
Most alloys are susceptible to intergranular corrosion, also known as intergranular attack (IGA), when exposed to specific environments. This article reviews the theory and application of acceptance tests for detecting the susceptibility of stainless steels and nickel-base alloys to IGA. It describes the most serious forms of structure-dependent corrosion, such as stress-corrosion cracking and exfoliation, in aluminum alloys including strain-Hardened 5xxx (Al-Mg) alloys and heat treated high-strength alloys. The article concludes with information on the evaluation tests for other alloys such as magnesium alloys and zinc die casting alloys.
Book Chapter
Series: ASM Desk Editions
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 December 1998
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.mhde2.a0003147
EISBN: 978-1-62708-199-3
... No. 20Cb3 (Fe-35Ni-20Cr) N08020 20Mo-4 (Fe-37Ni-23Cr-4Mo) N08024 20Mo-6 (Fe-35Ni-24Cr-6Mo) N08026 Al-6X (Fe-24Ni-21Cr-7Mo) N08366 A distinction is usually made between alloys that are primarily used for high-temperature strength, commonly referred to as superalloys, and alloys...
Abstract
Nickel and nickel-base alloys are vitally important to modern industry because of their ability to withstand a wide variety of severe operating conditions involving corrosive environments, high temperatures, high stresses, and combinations of these factors. This article discusses the mining and extraction of nickel and describes the uses of nickel. It discusses the categories of nickel-base alloys, including wrought corrosion-resistant alloys, cast corrosion-resistant alloys, heat-resistant alloys (superalloys), and special-purpose alloys. The article covers the corrosion resistance of nickel with the inclusion of varying alloying elements. It provides useful information on the behavior of nickel and nickel alloys in specific environments describes its corrosion resistance in certain acids, alkalis, and salts.
Book: Corrosion: Materials
Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 13B
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 January 2005
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v13b.a0003821
EISBN: 978-1-62708-183-2
... , alongside the corresponding line for C-2000 alloy. Type 316L stainless steel (S31603) and 20Cb-3 alloy (N08020) contain 2.5 wt% Mo, while 254SMO alloy (S31254) contains 6 wt% Mo. The plot indicates that molybdenum is beneficial to the stainless steels in hydrochloric acid. It also indicates how much more...
Abstract
This article reviews the corrosion behavior in various environments for seven important nickel alloy families: commercially pure nickel, Ni-Cu, Ni-Mo, Ni-Cr, Ni-Cr-Mo, Ni-Cr-Fe, and Ni-Fe-Cr. It examines the behavior of nickel alloys in corrosive media found in industrial settings. The corrosive media include: hydrochloric acid, sulfuric acid, phosphoric acid, hydrofluoric acid, hydrobromic acid, nitric acid, organic acids, salts, seawater, and alkalis. The modes of high-temperature corrosion include oxidation, carburization, metal dusting, sulfidation, nitridation, corrosion by halogens, and corrosion by molten salts. Applications where the corrosion properties of nickel alloys are important factors in materials selection include the petroleum, chemical, and electrical power industries. Most nickel alloys are much more resistant than the stainless steels to reducing acids, such as hydrochloric, and some are extremely resistant to the chloride-induced phenomena of pitting, crevice attack, and stress-corrosion cracking (to which the stainless steels are susceptible). Nickel alloys are also among the few metallic materials able to cope with hot hydrofluoric acid. The conditions where nickel alloys suffer environmentally assisted cracking are highly specific and therefore avoidable by proper design of the industrial components.
Book: Corrosion: Materials
Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 13B
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 January 2005
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v13b.a0003812
EISBN: 978-1-62708-183-2
... 0.035 1.00 19.0–23.0 23.0–28.0 4.0–5.0 0.10N, 1.0–2.0Cu N08700 JS700 0.04 2.00 0.040 0.030 1.00 19.0–23.0 24.0–26.0 4.3–5.0 0.5Cu, Nb: (8×C) −1.00 JS777 0.025 1.70 0.03 0.03 0.50 19.00–23.00 24.0–26.0 4.00–5.00 2.10Cu, 0.25Nb N08020 20Cb-3 0.07 2.00 0.045 0.035...
Abstract
This article provides an overview of the identification systems for various grades of wrought stainless steels, namely, the American Iron and Steel Institute numbering system, the Unified Numbering System, and proprietary designations. It elaborates on five major families of stainless steels, as defined by the crystallographic structure. These include ferritic stainless steels, austenitic stainless steels, martensitic stainless steels, and precipitation-hardening stainless steels. The mechanism of corrosion protection for stainless steels is reviewed. The article examines the effects of composition, processing, design, fabrication, and external treatments on the corrosion of stainless steels. Various forms of corrosion, namely, general, galvanic, pitting, crevice, intergranular, stress-corrosion cracking, erosion-corrosion, and oxidation, are reviewed. Corrosion testing for; corrosion in atmosphere, water, and chemical environments; and the applications of stainless steels in various industries are also discussed.
Book Chapter
Book: Corrosion: Materials
Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 13B
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 January 2005
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v13b.a0006543
EISBN: 978-1-62708-183-2
... T12001 8.67 0.313 M2 tool steel T11302 8.16 0.295 W1 tool steel T72301 7.84 0.282 O6 tool steel T31506 7.70 0.277 A2 tool steel T30102 7.86 0.284 H22 tool steel T20822 8.36 0.302 L6 tool steel T61206 7.86 0.284 P20 tool steel T51620 7.85 0.284 20Cb3 N08020...
Abstract
Density allows for the conversion of uniform corrosion rates from units of weight (or mass) loss per unit area per time to thickness per unit time. This article contains a table that lists the density of metals, such as aluminum, copper, iron, stainless steel, magnesium, and lead, and their alloys.
Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 13C
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 January 2006
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v13c.a0004178
EISBN: 978-1-62708-184-9
... Alloys The 20-type alloys are usually the first considered when an H 2 SO 4 environment is too corrosive for the use of steel, 300 series stainless steels, or cast iron. This group contains both wrought alloy 20Cb-3 (N08020) and cast alloy ACI CN-7M (N08007) that are roughly equivalent...
Abstract
This article describes the selection of materials for the production and handling equipment of concentrated sulfuric acid, depending on factors such as the allowable corrosion rate, desired mechanical and physical properties, fabrication requirements, availability, and cost. Materials such as carbon steel, cast irons, austenitic stainless steels, higher austenitic stainless steels, higher chromium Fe-Ni-Mo alloys, nickel-base alloys, non-metals, and specific other metals and alloys are also discussed.
Series: ASM Desk Editions
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 December 1998
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.mhde2.a0003203
EISBN: 978-1-62708-199-3
...–1950 N08020 20Cb-3 925–955 1700–1750 Low-carbon grades S30403 304L 1010–1120 1850–2050 S30453 304LN 1010–1120 1850–2050 S31603 316L 1040–1110 1900–2025 S31653 316LN 1040–1110 1900–2025 S31703 317L 1040–1110 1900–2025 High-nitrogen grades S20100 201...
Abstract
Heat treating of stainless steel produces changes in physical condition, mechanical properties, and residual stress level and restores maximum corrosion resistance when that property has been adversely affected by previous fabrication or heating. This article focuses on annealing of different types of stainless steels such as austenitic, ferritic, duplex, martensitic, and precipitation-hardening, and on the heat treatment of superalloys and refractory metals. It discusses the recommended procedures for solution annealing, austenite conditioning, transformation cooling, and age tempering of precipitation-hardening stainless steels. The article also lists general recommendations for the annealing temperatures of tantalum, niobium, molybdenum, tungsten, and their alloys.
Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 13C
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 January 2006
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v13c.a0004187
EISBN: 978-1-62708-184-9
... 25.5 21 44 4.5 … 1.5 … … … … … N08825 825 42 21.5 28.5 3 … 2.25 … … … … … N08367 AL 6XN 24.5 21 45 6.5 … … … … … … … N08031 31 31 27 32 6.5 … … … … … … 0.2N N08028 Sanicro 28 31 27 34 3.5 … 1 … … … … … N08020 20Cb-3 35 20 35...
Abstract
Mixtures of acids or acids and salts are of great importance to the chemical process industry (CPI) for use in digestion of solids, as a promoter in reactions, as a scale remover, and as a complexant. This article emphasizes the assessment of the performance of Ni-Fe-Cr-Mo alloys in mixed acids and salts in an objective manner. It tabulates the nominal compositions of pertinent Ni-Fe-Cr-Mo corrosion-resistant alloys. The article describes the acid and acid-plus-salt mixtures classified into the following general categories: nonoxidizing acid mixtures (H 2 SO 4 +H 3 PO 4 ), nonoxidizing acids with halides (H 2 SO 4 +HCl), oxidizing acid mixtures without halides (H 2 SO 4 +HNO 3 ), and oxidizing acid mixtures with halides (HNO 3 +HF). It also illustrates the effect of alloying elements on the corrosion rate in the nonoxidizing mixtures and oxidizing acid mixtures.
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