Innovative Approaches for Predicting Galvanic Effects of Dissimilar Material Interfaces
Navy SBIR FY2011.2


Sol No.: Navy SBIR FY2011.2
Topic No.: N112-154
Topic Title: Innovative Approaches for Predicting Galvanic Effects of Dissimilar Material Interfaces
Proposal No.: N112-154-0165
Firm: VEXTEC Corporation
750 Old Hickory Blvd
Bldg. 2, Suite 270
Brentwood, Tennessee 37027
Contact: Robert Tryon
Phone: (615) 372-0299
Web Site: www.vextec.com
Abstract: The Navy incurred approximately $3 billion in aircraft corrosion maintenance costs. Design analysis tools are largely empirical and are derived from physical testing of the basic material specimens, which do not have the capability to account for degradation of these properties due to operational conditions. Corrosion is a time-dependent phenomenon and although there are test methods for accelerating corrosion testing, this does not provide an actual depiction of the field phenomenon of corrosion. Damage is often not fully realized until after years of exposure to the corrosive environment. Our Phase I feasibility proof activities will focus on the adding the prediction of galvanic effects of dissimilar material interfaces to VEXTEC's already operational material fatigue simulation framework. The Phase I will demonstrate that a computational tool is capable of correctly predicting galvanic corrosion based on the dissimilar material systems, alloy's microstructure, processing history and operational environment. The methodology and framework developed under the proposed Phase I effort will be mechanistic (and not empirical) in nature and therefore can be readily extended to a variety of material combinations in corrosive environments.
Benefits: The total annual cost of corrosion incurred by the military services for both systems and infrastructure was estimated at $20 billion. VEXTEC simulated an under-wing panel of a typical Navy aircraft under realistic mission loads and showed how corrosion reduced the fatigue life by 33%.

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