1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is generally related to a system for inhibiting the corrosion of components within a marine propulsion system and, more particularly, to a system with primary and secondary corrosion inhibiting devices that are configured to work cooperatively with each other while avoiding the disadvantageous results that can sometimes occur when two cathodic systems are both used on a common marine vessel.
2. Description of the Related Art
Those who are skilled in the art of marine propulsion systems are familiar with various techniques that can be used to inhibit the corrosion of submerged components through the formation of galvanic circuits. Those skilled artisans are also familiar with various techniques used to avoid the formation of those galvanic circuits that can otherwise degrade and erode the surface of metallic components used in marine propulsion systems.
U.S. Pat. No. 2,571,062, which issued to Robinson et al. on Oct. 9, 1951, describes a sacrificial anode system for protecting metals in seawater. The tendency for structures of steel and similar metals, when immersed in seawater, to undergo serious corrosion can be offset by cathodic protection. In this process the structure is made the cathode in an electric circuit using the seawater as an electrolyte. If sufficient current is supplied, the structure can be kept from corroding.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,242,064, which issued to Byrne on Mar. 22, 1966, describes a cathodic protection system. It relates to corrosion reduction systems in which the direct current supplied to the surface to be protected, such as the hull of a ship, is automatically varied in accordance with the protective conditions on the hull, as monitored by a sensing half-cell.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,327,214, which issued to Allen et al. on Jun. 20, 1967, describes an electronic current meter having linear response. It relates to an electronic meter and, more particularly, to one used in procedures for determining the current requirements for cathodic protection of well casings and the like. The current required for the cathodic protection of well casings and the like can be determined by the polarization curve method. In this method, cathodic currents are applied to the well casing in discreet increments. At each current increment, the current is momentarily interrupted and the casing-to-soil polarization potential, with respect to a reference electrode placed in the earth some distance from the well head, is determined. The difference between these measured polarization potentials with each increase in current are normally of the order of a few millivolts.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,953,742, which issued to Anderson et al. on Apr. 27, 1976, discloses a cathodic protection monitoring apparatus for a marine propulsion device. The monitor is coupled to an impressed current cathodic protection circuit used for corrosion protection of a submerged marine drive. The cathodic protection circuit includes one or more anodes and a reference electrode mounted below the water line and connected to an automatic controller for supplying an anode current which is regulated in order to maintain a predetermined reference potential on the protected structure. A switch selectively connects a light emitting diode (LED) lamp or other light source between the controller output and ground so that the controller current may, when tested, be used to operate the light source in order to confirm that power is available to the anode.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,322,633, which issued to Staerzl on Mar. 30, 1982, discloses a marine cathodic protection system. It maintains a submerged portion of a marine drive unit at a selected potential to reduce or eliminate corrosion thereto. An anode is energized to maintain the drive unit at a preselected constant potential in response to the sensed potential at a closely located reference electrode during normal operations. Excessive current to the anode is sensed to provide a maximum current limitation. An integrated circuit employs a highly regulated voltage source to establish precise control of the anode energization.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,445,989, which issued to Kumar et al. on May 1, 1984, describes a ceramic anode for corrosion protection. The anode is useful in corrosion protection comprising a metallic substrate having an applied layer thereon of a ferrite or a chromite, is described. The layer having metallic is electronic conductivity and a thickness of at least 10 mils is used.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,492,877, which issued to Staerzl on Jan. 8, 1985, discloses an electrode apparatus for cathodic protection. The apparatus is provided for mounting an anode and reference electrode of a cathodic protection system on an outboard drive unit. The apparatus includes an insulating housing on which the anode and reference electrode are mounted and a copper shield mounted between the anode and electrode to allow them to be mounted in close proximity to each other. The shield is electrically connected to the device to be protected and serves to match the electrical field potential at the reference electrodes to that of a point on the outboard drive unit and remote from the housing.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,528,460, which issued to Staerzl on Jul. 9, 1985, discloses a cathodic protection controller. A control system for cathodically protecting an outboard drive unit from corrosion includes an anode and a reference electrode mounted on the drive unit. Current supplied to the anode is controlled by a transistor, which in turn is controlled by an amplifier. The amplifier is biased to maintain a relatively constant potential on the drive unit when operated in either fresh or salt water.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,872,860 which issued to Meisenburg on Oct. 10, 1989, discloses a sacrificial anode for marine propulsion units. The anode is disposed in association with the trim cylinder unit of a marine propulsion device and is positioned in the previously unused area between the aft cylinder end and the rodeye or the like on the piston rod end. More specifically, the anode is in the form of an elongated generally cylindrical member of a diameter approximately that of the trim cylinder to provide improved mass characteristics, and is deeply grooved to thus provide ribs which enhance the working surface area. The anode may be attached to an extended pilot member which is suitably secured within the aft end of the trim cylinder.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,627,414, which issued to Brown et al. on May 6, 1997, describes an automatic marine cathodic protection system using galvanic anodes. The system provides a controlled and optimum amount of cathodic protection against galvanic corrosion on submerged metal parts. Intermittently pulsed control circuitry enables an electro-mechanical servo system to control a resistive element interposed between the sacrificial anodes and the electrically bonded underwater parts. In an active mode of operation a current is applied directly to the anodes to quickly establish the proper level of correction which is maintained during the passive mode.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,716,248, which issued to Nakamura on Feb. 10, 1998, describes a sacrificial anode for marine propulsion units. Various anode arrangements for marine propulsion units are described wherein the sacrificial anode is juxtaposed to the trim tab and is detachably connected to the lower unit housing by fastening means which can be removed from the upper surface thereof. In one embodiment, the trim tab is detachably connected to the sacrificial anode and connected to the outer housing portion through the sacrificial anode.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,747,892, which issued to Staerzl on May 5, 1998, discloses a galvanic isolator fault monitor. A system and method for testing and monitoring the operation of a galvanic isolator is disclosed. The galvanic isolator is positioned between shore ground and boat ground to prevent the flow of destructive galvanic currents between the shore ground and the boat ground. The monitoring system transmits a test current through the galvanic isolator at specific time internals to test the effectiveness of the galvanic isolator. The monitoring system includes a first counter that outputs an enabling signal after a desired period of time. The enabling signal allows a test current to flow through the galvanic isolator for a brief period of time determined by a second counter.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,840,164, which issued to Staerzl on Nov. 24, 1998, discloses a galvanic isolator. It is intended to protect against galvanic corrosion of a submersible metal marine drive. The galvanic isolator is positioned between shore ground and boat ground to prevent the flow of destructive galvanic currents between those grounds while maintaining the safety function of neutral ground. The galvanic isolator of the invention includes a blocking element positioned between the boat ground and the shore ground that can be switched between an opened and a closed state by a trigger circuit. The trigger circuit closes the blocking element when the voltage difference between the boat ground and the shore ground exceeds a threshold value, such as 1.4 volts. During operation of the galvanic isolator during the high fault current situation, power is dissipated only by the blocking element, rather than by the combination of the blocking element and the trigger device. In this manner, the galvanic isolator reduces the amount of power dissipated during high current conditions and therefore reduces the amount of heat generated by the galvanic isolator.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,183,625, which issued to Staerzl on Feb. 6, 2001, discloses a marine galvanic protection monitor. The system uses two annunciators, such like light emitting diodes, to alert a boat operator of the current status of the boat's galvanic protection system. A reference electrode is used to monitor the voltage potential at a location in the water and near the component to be protected. The voltage potential of the electrode is compared to upper and lower limits to determine if the actual sensed voltage potential is above the lower limit and below the upper limit. The two annunciator lights are used to inform the operator if the protection is proper or if the component to be protected is either being overprotected or underprotected.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,547,952, which issued to Staerzl on Apr. 15, 2003, discloses a system for inhibiting fouling of an underwater surface. An electrically conductive surface is combined with a protective surface of glass in order to provide an anode from which electrons can be transferred to seawater for the purpose of generating gaseous chlorine on the surface to be protected. Ambient temperature cure glass (ATC glass) provides a covalent bond on an electrically conductive surface, such as nickel-bearing paint. In this way, both hulls, submerged portions of outboard motors, and submerged portions of sterndrive systems can be protected effectively from the growth of marine organisms, such as barnacles.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,064,459, which issued to Staerzl on Jun. 20, 2006, discloses a method of inhibiting corrosion of a component of a marine vessel. A method for inhibiting galvanic corrosion of marine propulsion components impresses an electronic current into the protected component and causes the protected component to act as a cathode in a galvanic circuit which comprises a conductor, such as a ground wire connected between the protected component and an electrical conductor which is external to the marine vessel on which the protective component is attached. The electrical conductor can be a ground wire of an electrical power cable connected between the marine vessel and the shore ground. The sea bed is caused to act as an anode in the galvanic circuit, with varying voltage potentials existing within the water between the sea bed and the protected component. The system can be a closed loop control circuit using a voltage sensed by an electrode, or an open loop circuit that provides current pulses based on empirical data.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,381,312, which issued to Misorski et al. on Jun. 3, 2008, discloses a cathodic protection system for a marine propulsion device with a ceramic conductor. A ceramic conductor is supported by an electrically insulative support member for attachment directly to a marine propulsion drive and for use as either an anode or electrode in a corrosion prevention system. The ceramic conductor is received within a depression formed in a surface of the electrically insulative support member and the exposed surface of the ceramic conductor can be offset from or coplanar with an exposed surface of the electrically insulative support member. The ceramic conductor can comprise oxides of iridium, tantalum and titanium that are formed as a coating on a titanium substrate.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,387,556, which issued to Davis on Jun. 17, 2008, discloses an exhaust system for a marine propulsion device having a driveshaft extended vertically through a bottom portion of a boat hull. The exhaust system directs a flow of exhaust gas from an engine located within the marine vessel, and preferably within a bilge portion of the marine vessel, through a housing which is rotatable and supported below the marine vessel. The exhaust passageway extends through an interface between the stationary and rotatable portions of the marine propulsion device, through a cavity formed in the housing, and outwardly through hubs of pusher propellers to conduct the exhaust gas away from the propellers without causing a deleterious condition referred to as ventilation.
The patents described above are hereby expressly incorporated by reference in the description of the present invention.
Those skilled in the art of marine propulsion systems and corrosion inhibiting devices are familiar with the fact that two basic approaches have been used for many years to inhibit galvanic corrosion. One technique involves the use of a sacrificial anode which, as the name implies, uses an anode that is sacrificed in order to protect a more important or valuable device, such as an aluminum marine drive unit. The sacrifice involves the gradual corrosion and, potentially, the eventual disappearance of the material of which the sacrificial anode is made. This material typically comprises zinc, magnesium, or aluminum because of their relative potential difference to the material that they are protecting which can be summarized in a table called the galvanic series. A circuit using this technique typically selects a material with an electrode potential that is more negative than the material of the component being protected. As an example, using the values from Table III, if the goal is to protect an iron component (electrode potential of −700 mV) it would be possible to use an aluminum anode (electrode potential of −1075 mV) as the sacrificial component because the aluminum would sacrifice itself by giving up electrons to protect the iron. Another example could use a zinc anode (electrode potential of −1150 mV) in order to protect a copper device (electrode potential of −300 mV).
Another technique that can be used to inhibit galvanic corrosion is a system that impresses a current into the protected component in order to raise its potential and cause it to act as a cathode in the circuit which connects the protected component (i.e. the cathode) electrically with the sacrificial component (i.e. the anode) with a conductor (i.e. a wire or other current path between the protected component and the protecting component). This forms a half cell. Another half cell is made up of the sacrificial and protected components along with an electrolyte (i.e. water) in which they are both submerged. The conductor provides a path through which electrons can flow from the anode to the cathode as the ions move through the electrolyte from the cathode to the anode.
Since both of these techniques are available to the designer for the purpose of inhibiting galvanic corrosion, in many systems both techniques are used in the same design. This provides both primary and secondary corrosion inhibiting systems. However, as will be described in greater detail below, the presence of both systems can lead to disadvantageous interactions in which the efficiency of the total system is decreased. As will be described in greater detail below, it would be significantly beneficial if a system could be provided to allow the use of primary and secondary systems in a way which avoids the disadvantageous interactions between them. It would also be beneficial if the system could also be directed toward the goal of avoiding the counterproductive interference between primary and secondary systems in the ways that are prevalent in the prior art.
A corrosion inhibiting system made in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention comprises a primary corrosion protection device configured to maintain a marine propulsion unit at a selected potential wherein the marine propulsion unit is made of a first material, a secondary corrosion protection device made of a second material wherein the first and second materials are dissimilar materials, an electrical conductor connected in electrical communication between the first material of the marine propulsion unit and the second material of the secondary corrosion protection device, and a continuity controller connected in electrical communication with the electrical conductor between the first material of the marine propulsion unit and the second material of the secondary corrosion protection device.
The primary corrosion protection device is configured to maintain the marine propulsion unit at the selected potential by supplying electrical energy from a direct current source to a submergible electrode located adjacent to the marine propulsion unit, wherein the secondary corrosion protection device is a submergible anode and wherein the second material is selected to act as a sacrificial anode and cathodically protect the first material when the first and second materials are connected together in electrical communication, and wherein the electrical conductor comprises an electrically conductive cable which extends at least partially between the first and second materials. It should be understood that by the term “electrically conductive cable”, the description of the preferred embodiments of the present invention is intended to include any type of component or device which connects various portions of the system together electrically so that electrons can travel between the first and second materials.
The continuity controller can be a switch which is controllable as a function of the operability of the cathodic protection device and the cathodic protection device can be configured to open the switch to disconnect the submergible anode from the marine propulsion unit when the marine propulsion unit is operating effectively to maintain the marine propulsion unit at the selected potential. The cathodic protection device can also be configured to close the switch to connect the submergible anode in electrical communication with the marine propulsion unit when the marine propulsion unit is not maintaining the marine propulsion unit at the selected potential. The cathodic protection device is configured, in preferred embodiments of the present invention, to maintain the marine propulsion unit at the selected potential when the switch is closed.
Alternatively, the continuity controller can be a diode which is configured to limit the magnitude of an electric current flowing to the anode as a function of the relative potentials of the submergible marine propulsion unit and the submergible anode. The first material can be a metal, which is intended to be protected, and is typically selected from the group consisting of bronze, aluminum, and stainless steel and the second material can be a metal, which is intended to be sacrificed, and is typically selected from the group consisting of zinc, magnesium, and aluminum.
In certain embodiments of the present invention, it can further comprise an alarm device configured to provide visual or audible notification of the continuity controller being activated to connect the submergible anode in electrical communication with the marine propulsion unit. This alarm device can vary from a simple notification to the operator of a vessel by activating a signal light, such as an LED, or writing a message on a display screen. Alternatively, the alarm device can be an audible notification device such as a siren or computer generated sound.
The present invention will be more fully and completely understood from a reading of the description of the preferred embodiment in conjunction with the drawings, in which:
Throughout the description of the preferred embodiment of the present invention, like components will be identified by like reference numerals.
In order to understand the characteristics and advantages of the preferred embodiments of the present invention, it is helpful if it is understood how dissimilar metals react when placed in an electrolyte and provided with a path through which electrons can travel.
It is common for a marine propulsion system to incorporate an aluminum driveshaft housing in combination with a stainless steel propeller with both of those dissimilar metals being immersed in seawater which acts as the electrolyte. If the stainless steel propeller and aluminum housing are electrically connected together, as they typically are in a marine propulsion unit, it forms a battery with electrical current flowing between the dissimilar metals. The corrosion associated with this type of connection between dissimilar metals is called galvanic corrosion. The aluminum housing loses material in the form of aluminum ions, through the electrolyte, and electrons flow from the aluminum housing through various electrical connections, as symbolized by wire 16 in
Table II also shows the relative position of numerous metal alloys according to their activity in relation to other metals. A metal alloy is a combination of one metal with other metals or elements. In Table II, the precise magnitude of the electrode potential is not shown. Table II contains many additional metal alloys. For example, many varieties of stainless steel are shown with numerous varieties of aluminum. The purpose of Table II is to show that certain minor variations in the type of alloy can affect the position in the table of the alloy and the relative activity of the metal in comparison to other metals.
Table III, shown below, contains an abbreviated group of metals selected to show certain specific examples which will be discussed below. Each of the metals shown in Table III is identified by its potential, shown in millivolts. As mentioned above, marine applications typically use many different types of metals in combination with each other and place those metals within a common electrolyte, such as the body of water in which a marine vessel is operated. This can lead to numerous opportunities for galvanic corrosion to occur. As an example, if bronze is connected electrically to aluminum in a common electrolyte, such as seawater, the aluminum will become the anode in the circuit and, as a result, the aluminum will be corroded. However, as also shown in Table III below, zinc is more active than the aluminum. As a result, zinc anodes can be used to protect the aluminum. The zinc, because of its position in the table below, corrodes in preference to the aluminum and can thus be used as a sacrificial anode to protect the aluminum.
As described above in conjunction with Tables I, II, and III, it can be seen that corrosion is an electrolytic action that involves an exchange of both electrons and ions. It can occur either between dissimilar metals or, in certain circumstances, between different areas of the same metal or alloy component if there are differences in chemical composition and a resulting electrochemical potential between those areas. It should be remembered that metal dissolves at the anode while hydroxide ions (OH) congregate at the cathode. Therefore, it is the anode that corrodes and the determination of which metal acts as the anode is generally dependent on the positions of the metals in the tables illustrated above. When placed in electrical communication in an electrolyte such as seawater, the metals that are higher, in the tables shown above, as an associated metal in a galvanic circuit will tend to act as the cathode and the metals that are lower, in the tables shown above, will tend to act as the anode.
In order to fully understand and appreciate the advantages that are brought about by the preferred embodiments of the present invention, it is helpful to realize that in order for electrochemical reactions (such as galvanic corrosion) to occur, four components must be present and operative. These components include the anode, the cathode, the electron path, and the electrolyte. The anode is the site where electrons are produced and where metal loss occurs. The metal loses electrons which migrate from the metal surface and through the various electrical connections that provide the electron path to the cathode. The electrons remaining in the metal are free to move about in response to the voltage gradients present in the structure.
The cathode is the site where electrons are consumed. For each electron that is produced at the anode, an electron must be consumed at the cathode. In order for electrons to flow from the anode to the cathode, the electrons migrate through a metallic path between the two metals. A voltage differential causes the migration of electrons between the anode and the cathode. Electrons can move more easily through metals, but certain non-metallic materials, such as graphite, can serve this purpose. The electrolyte, such as seawater, conducts the electrical currents through the movement of charged chemical constituents that are referred to as ions. Positive and negative ions are present in equal amounts, with the positive ions tending to migrate away from the anode and toward the cathode and negative ions tending to migrate away from the cathode toward the anode.
In order to understand the advantageous operation of the various preferred embodiments of the present invention it is also helpful to understand a few basic facts relating to galvanic corrosion. It is important to understand that when galvanic corrosion occurs, electrons flow from the anode and are accepted by the cathode. The anode in the galvanic circuit is the metal that is more chemically active (lower in the tables shown above). These electrons flow through the external conducting path (the wire in
The important lesson to understand from the discussion above is that dissimilar metals, when connected in electrical communication with each other, can cause the transfer of electrons from the metal acting as the anode to the metal acting as the cathode. This, in turn, causes ions to be transferred between the metals through an electrolyte, such as seawater. As a result, galvanic corrosion can occur through this simple combination of dissimilar metals. As an example, if one end of a zinc wire is placed in contact with one end of a copper wire, and the opposite ends of both wires are placed in an electrolyte, current will flow and electrons will pass from the zinc wire to the copper wire at the junction where the two wires are in contact with each other. That result was originally discovered by Luigi Galvani in 1791 and illustrates the basic relationship between the anode and cathode in a galvanic circuit along with the electrolyte. The relationships between metals, as described above, are well known to those skilled in the art of marine vessels and the galvanic corrosion that can occur because of the numerous dissimilar metals involved in marine propulsion systems. In addition, the placement of those dissimilar metals in an electrolyte, such as seawater, and the relationship between these associations and galvanic corrosion is also well known to those skilled in the art.
With continued reference to
With continued reference to
For purposes of describing the problem addressed by the various embodiments of the present invention, the corrosion protection system provided by the cathode protection device 42 will be referred to as the primary corrosion protection device and the sacrificial anode 34 will be referred to as the secondary corrosion protection device. It is common to provide both the primary and secondary corrosion protection devices on the same marine vessel. However, the use of the two systems simultaneously, as is sometimes the case, can lead to certain problems. One of the problems that can result from the use of both primary and secondary corrosion protection systems, as described above in conjunction with
With reference to Table III shown above, when two or more of the materials, or the cathode protection device 42 are electrically connected and immersed in seawater as an electrolyte, the higher potential material corrodes to protect the lower potential materials. In one exemplary system, either a zinc or aluminum-indium sacrificial anode 34 has been connected in combination with a MerCathode system, a bronze driveshaft housing and a stainless steel propeller. In that case, the zinc or aluminum-indium sacrificial anode corroded at an unacceptably high rate and, as a result, the MerCathode device did little work to protect the bronze driveshaft housing 20 and the stainless steel propeller 24. When an aluminum-gallium sacrificial anode is used in combination with a MerCathode device, a bronze housing, and a stainless steel propeller, the MerCathode system protects the bronze housing, stainless steel propeller, and aluminum-gallium sacrificial anode. However, as should be understood from the above discussion, the use of a cathode protection device 42, such as a MerCathode device, in this way can be inefficient because the MerCathode device uses some of its available capacity and electrical power in protecting the sacrificial anode and therefore has less available capacity to protect the much more expensive bronze housing and stainless steel propeller. This is particularly critical in situations where flowing water exists and the MerCathode device has reached the limits of its capacity. It must be remembered that the MerCathode unit, or alternative cathode protection device 42, uses electric power, in the form of a DC current obtained from a battery, to impress the voltage potential that protects the bronze housing.
In order to overcome the problems described above and also make use of the concept of having a primary and secondary system of corrosion prevention, the preferred embodiments of the present invention disable either the primary or secondary systems at appropriate times determined as a function of the operability of the cathode protection device 42. If it is determined that the cathode protection device 42, such as a MerCathode unit, is not operating properly, it is disabled and the sacrificial anode 34 is connected. If the MerCathode device is operating correctly, but not able to provide sufficient output, it remains enabled and the sacrificial anode is also connected to provide additional protection.
The embodiment of the present invention shown in
With continued reference to
With continued reference to
As described above, U.S. Pat. No. 4,322,633, which issued to Staerzl on Mar. 30, 1982, describes a marine cathodic protection system such as the one identified by reference numeral 42 and illustrated in
With reference to
The embodiment of the present invention shown in
Although the present invention has been described in particular detail and illustrated to show certain preferred embodiments, it should be understood that alternative embodiments are also within its scope.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2571062 | Robinson et al. | Oct 1951 | A |
3242064 | Byrne | Mar 1966 | A |
3327214 | Allen et al. | Jun 1967 | A |
3953742 | Anderson et al. | Apr 1976 | A |
4322633 | Staerzl | Mar 1982 | A |
4381981 | Maes | May 1983 | A |
4445989 | Kumar et al. | May 1984 | A |
4492877 | Staerzl | Jan 1985 | A |
4528460 | Staerzl | Jul 1985 | A |
4592818 | Cavil et al. | Jun 1986 | A |
4872860 | Meisenburg | Oct 1989 | A |
5627414 | Brown et al. | May 1997 | A |
5716248 | Nakamura | Feb 1998 | A |
5747892 | Staerzl | May 1998 | A |
5840164 | Staerzl | Nov 1998 | A |
6183625 | Staerzl | Feb 2001 | B1 |
6547952 | Staerzl | Apr 2003 | B1 |
6559660 | Staerzl | May 2003 | B1 |
7064459 | Staerzl | Jun 2006 | B1 |
7381312 | Misorski et al. | Jun 2008 | B1 |
7387556 | Davis | Jun 2008 | B1 |
20060065551 | Howard et al. | Mar 2006 | A1 |
20060213765 | Mizuno et al. | Sep 2006 | A1 |