Corrosion of metals in wood: Comparing the results of a rapid test method with long-term exposure tests across six wood treatments |
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Authors: | Samuel L Zelinka Donald S Stone |
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Affiliation: | aUSDA Forest Products Laboratory, One Gifford Pinchot Drive, Madison, WI 53726, United States;bDepartment of Materials Science and Engineering, College of Engineering, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706, United States |
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Abstract: | This paper compares two methods of measuring the corrosion of steel and galvanized steel in wood: a long-term exposure test in solid wood and a rapid test method where fasteners are electrochemically polarized in extracts of wood treated with six different treatments. For traditional wood preservatives, the electrochemical extract method correlates with solid wood exposure which suggests that the reduction of cupric ions is the cathodic reaction in both the solid wood and the extract. For treatments without copper, the extract method predicted a higher corrosion rate than the solid wood exposure. For these treatments, the cathodic reaction appears to be the reduction of acid and dissolved oxygen. The practical implication of this work is that in some cases, the rapid test method could be used to screen new fasteners and wood preservatives. Scientifically, this work increases the understanding of the mechanism of corrosion of fasteners in treated and untreated wood. |
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Keywords: | A Steel A Zinc B Polarization B Weight loss |
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