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Journal Article

Citation

Dahal KP, Timilsena JN, Gautam M, Bhattarai J. J. Fail. Anal. Prev. 2021; 21(3): 914-926.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, ASM International, Publisher Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s11668-021-01138-2

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Potable water supplies mostly through buried galvanized steel and cast-iron pipes from distribution terminals to the public, and a lot of corrosion failures occurred each year in urban cities of Nepal. It is an urgent need to know the main responsible factors for such buried metallic pipeline failures and subsequently evaluate the level of corrosion risk in soils of presently studied Kirtipur urban areas. Six factors (i.e., pH, moisture, resistivity, oxidationreduction potential-ORP, chloride, and sulfate ions) of fifty-three soil samples were determined using American Standard for Testing and Materials (ASTM) standard. It estimates 6.47.9 pH, 745% moisture, 4.5 10345.5 103 Ohm.cm resistivity, 317514 mV ORP, 1286 ppm chloride, and 40294 ppm sulfate ions in the samples, indicating the soils of the Kirtipur urban areas could classify mostly into mildly corrosive and less corrosive groups to the buried galvanized steel and cast-iron pipes. Furthermore, a new probabilistic corrosion failure model is proposed for the study of the soil corrosivity level more precisely based on sub-corrosion groups by considering the experimental data of six soil factors. Present findings would be insightful for corrosion mapping of soil lands to study the underground pipeline works in the future. © 2021, ASM International.

Keywords: Pipeline transportation


Language: en

Keywords

Soils; Pipeline corrosion; Pipelines; Steel corrosion; Sulfur compounds; Underground corrosion; Failure (mechanical); Cast iron; Water supply; Soil testing; Chlorine compounds; Cast iron pipe; Galvanizing; Moisture; Potable water; Steel castings

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