Galvanic Corrosion: The Electrochemical Series and Engineering Prevention

Galvanic corrosion (bimetallic corrosion) is one of the most reliably avoidable forms of corrosion — yet it remains among the most common causes of premature material failure in mixed-metal structures, marine vessels, aircraft, and process plant. Its prevention requires understanding standard electrode potentials, practical galvanic series, the thermodynamics and kinetics of mixed-potential theory, and the four principal engineering control strategies. This article provides a rigorous treatment of all four, with an interactive galvanic pair risk calculator for engineering materials selection.

Key Takeaways

  • Galvanic corrosion requires three simultaneous conditions: dissimilar metals (potential difference), metallic electrical contact, and an electrolyte. Eliminating any one of the three stops the process.
  • The anode-to-cathode area ratio is the single most important geometric parameter: a small anode coupled to a large cathode produces very high anode corrosion current density and accelerated metal loss.
  • The practical galvanic series in seawater (not the SHE series) governs engineering decisions. Passivating alloys such as titanium and 316L SS occupy very noble positions; zinc, cadmium, and magnesium are the most active.
  • A potential difference below 200 mV is generally acceptable; 200–500 mV is moderate risk; above 500 mV requires active mitigation (isolation, coating, or sacrificial anode).
  • Coating the cathode is far more effective than coating the anode. Coating only the anode creates the worst-case scenario at every coating defect.
  • Sacrificial anode cathodic protection is a deliberate engineering application of galvanic corrosion: an active metal (Zn, Al alloy, Mg) is coupled to protect the structure.

Galvanic Corrosion Risk Calculator

Potential difference and area ratio assessment per ASTM G82 guidance

— V
Potential difference (ΔE)
Cathode : Anode area ratio
Galvanic risk level

Assessment

Recommended Prevention Measures

    Potentials are open-circuit (corrosion) potentials in flowing seawater at ~25°C, referenced to Ag/AgCl. Values from ASM Handbook Vol. 13A and ASTM G82. Electrolyte modifier adjusts risk level indicatively. This tool is for screening only; full assessment requires laboratory testing per ASTM G71 with actual materials and service electrolyte.

    Galvanic Series in Seawater (Ag/AgCl reference) +0.3 0.0 −0.5 −1.0 −1.5 Corrosion potential (V vs Ag/AgCl) NOBLE ▲ ACTIVE ▼ Platinum Gold Titanium alloys 316 SS (passive) 304 SS (passive) Silver Nickel (active) 304 SS (active) 316 SS (active) Lead Bronze Copper Brass Cu-Ni (70/30) Low-alloy steel Cast iron Carbon steel Al 2024-T4 Al 5xxx series Cadmium Zinc (galvanised) Magnesium alloys Galvanic Cell Schematic Electrolyte (seawater / solution) Ion migration: Fe²⁺, Zn²⁺, OH⁻ ANODE Carbon steel −0.69 V CATHODE Copper −0.36 V e⁻ flow Fe → Fe²⁺ + 2e⁻ OXIDATION (corrosion) O₂ + 2H₂O + 4e⁻ → 4OH⁻ REDUCTION (protected) Small anode + large cathode = worst case iₐₙₒₓₑ = i_total / Aₐₙₒₓₑ → high when Aₐₙₒₓₑ is small ΔE = 0.33 V (example)
    Figure 1: Left — galvanic series in seawater showing approximate corrosion potentials (Ag/AgCl reference) for common engineering metals and alloys; active metals at bottom, noble at top. Right — galvanic cell schematic: the anode (carbon steel) is oxidised and corrodes; the cathode (copper) is reduced and protected. Electron current flows through the metallic path; ionic current (Fe2+, OH) flows through the electrolyte. © metallurgyzone.com

    Electrochemical Foundations

    Standard Electrode Potential and the SHE Series

    The thermodynamic driving force for galvanic corrosion is the difference in electrode potential between the two metals. In electrochemistry, the standard electrode potential (E°) of a half-reaction is measured relative to the standard hydrogen electrode (SHE), which is assigned E° = 0.000 V by convention. Standard conditions are unit activity (approximately 1 mol/L ionic concentration) at 25°C and 1 atm. The overall cell potential is:

    Cell EMF — Thermodynamic driving force
    E_cell = E_cathode(reduction) − E_anode(reduction)
           = E_cathode − E_anode   [both as standard reduction potentials]
    
    A positive E_cell indicates a spontaneous galvanic reaction.
    
    Example: Cu²²⁺ + 2e⁻ → Cu   E° = +0.340 V (SHE)
             Fe²⁺ + 2e⁻ → Fe   E° = −0.440 V (SHE)
             E_cell = 0.340 − (−0.440) = +0.780 V  [Cu/Fe couple in dilute solutions]

    The SHE series is thermodynamically rigorous but practically limited because it applies only to pure metals in their own ion solutions. Real engineering alloys in complex electrolytes behave very differently: passive films form on stainless steel and titanium, dramatically shifting their potential toward noble values; the activity of metal ions in seawater bears little resemblance to the 1 mol/L assumption; and temperature, velocity, and dissolved oxygen all shift the observed potential.

    Mixed Potential Theory and Corrosion Potential

    When a metal corrodes in an electrolyte in the absence of an external circuit, it achieves a steady-state corrosion potential (Ecorr) — also called the open-circuit potential or rest potential — where the anodic partial current (metal oxidation) exactly equals the cathodic partial current (oxygen reduction or hydrogen evolution). This is the potential listed in the practical galvanic series. When two dissimilar metals are coupled, the system finds a new mixed potential (Emixed) between the two individual corrosion potentials, with the less noble metal driving more anodic (corrosion) current and the more noble metal driving more cathodic current.

    Mixed Potential — Wagner-Traud principle
    At E_mixed:    I_anodic(A) + I_anodic(B) = I_cathodic(A) + I_cathodic(B)
    
    For a simple couple where metal A is the anode (E_corr,A < E_corr,B):
      • Metal A: E_mixed > E_corr,A  → net anodic → accelerated corrosion
      • Metal B: E_mixed < E_corr,B  → net cathodic → partial protection
    
    Galvanic current (I_g) is governed by:
      I_g = ΔE / (R_anodic_polarisation + R_cathodic_polarisation + R_electrolyte)

    The important practical implication is that the polarisation resistance of each electrode limits the galvanic current. Metals with steep polarisation curves (high Tafel slopes) pass less galvanic current for a given potential difference than metals with shallow slopes. This is why the potential difference alone is not always sufficient to predict galvanic corrosion severity; the kinetics must be considered.

    The Practical Galvanic Series in Seawater

    The galvanic series in seawater, compiled from extensive corrosion testing programmes at institutions including the LaQue Center for Corrosion Technology and published in ASTM G82 and ASM Handbook Vol. 13A, is the primary engineering reference for galvanic compatibility assessment in marine and offshore environments. Key features of the series are:

    • Passivating alloys occupy a dual position: 316L stainless steel in the passive state (+0.05 V) is far nobler than in the active state (−0.17 V). Design must account for the possibility of active/passive transitions at crevices, in low-velocity zones, or at weld HAZ sensitised regions.
    • Titanium alloys are the most noble structural engineering alloys in seawater, rendering them excellent cathodes but problematic partners for nearly any other structural metal.
    • Zinc is significantly more active than aluminium in seawater, explaining why zinc anodes are preferred for sacrificial protection of steel in seawater whereas magnesium anodes are preferred for buried pipelines and freshwater tanks.
    • Carbon steel, cast iron, and low-alloy steel occupy similar positions and form only mild galvanic couples with each other but form aggressive couples with copper alloys, stainless steels, and titanium.

    Electrolyte Conductivity and Galvanic Severity

    The electrolyte resistance (R_electrolyte) in the galvanic current equation above means that the same metal couple can have very different galvanic severity in different environments. Seawater (conductivity ~50 mS/cm) sustains much higher galvanic currents over longer distances than freshwater (0.05–0.5 mS/cm) or a rural atmosphere (thin-film electrolyte, very high resistance). This is why steel-aluminium bimetallic joints that perform adequately in dry indoor service can fail rapidly in a marine splash zone. General corrosion mechanisms are amplified in highly conductive electrolytes.

    The Area Ratio Effect

    The area ratio between cathode and anode is the single most important geometric parameter in determining the severity of galvanic attack. For a fixed total galvanic current (Ig):

    Area Ratio and Anodic Current Density
    i_anode = I_g / A_anode    (anodic current density, A/cm²)
    
    Corrosion rate = i_anode × M / (n × F × ρ)
    
    where:
      M = molar mass of anode metal (g/mol)
      n = number of electrons transferred per metal atom
      F = Faraday constant (96 485 C/mol)
      ρ = density of anode metal (g/cm³)
    
    Example: A_cathode / A_anode = 100 → i_anode is 100× higher
             than for A_cathode / A_anode = 1 (equal areas)

    This principle explains several notorious real-world failures. Carbon steel bolts or fasteners in a copper or stainless steel structure represent a small anode with a very large cathode — the bolts corrode at an extremely accelerated rate, even though the potential difference is moderate. Conversely, zinc-galvanised steel sheet (large zinc anode, small steel cathode at cut edges) provides effective corrosion protection because even if the zinc sacrifices, the current density at the steel is low.

    Acathode : Aanode ratio Relative anode corrosion rate Engineering classification
    1 : 11× (baseline)Acceptable for most couples
    5 : 1Caution — increased monitoring required
    10 : 110×High risk — design change or isolation required
    100 : 1100×Very high risk — will cause rapid anode failure
    > 100 : 1> 100×Unacceptable — redesign or cathodic protection mandatory

    Galvanic Corrosion in Weld Joints

    Welding creates microstructural and compositional gradients within and adjacent to the weld that can establish local galvanic cells, even within nominally the same alloy. In austenitic stainless steels, sensitisation of the weld HAZ (chromium depletion at grain boundaries during slow cooling through 550–850°C) renders the HAZ anodic relative to the unaffected base metal and weld metal, driving intergranular corrosion in aggressive environments. Weld metal with slightly different composition from the base metal can also establish a potential difference. Using low-carbon grades (304L, 316L) or stabilised grades (321, 347) avoids sensitisation and the attendant intergranular galvanic cell.

    In carbon and low-alloy steel weldments, the weld metal is typically slightly more noble than the HAZ due to the refined microstructure and lower residual stress. Differential aeration — oxygen depletion under mill scale or at crevices in the joint — creates additional oxygen concentration cells that overlap with and can dominate the galvanic cell geometry.

    Evans Diagram — Mixed Potential Theory for a Galvanic Couple Potential, E (V vs Ag/AgCl) +0.2 0.0 −0.3 −0.6 −0.9 Log current density, log i (A/cm²) 10⁻⁸ 10⁻⁷ 10⁻⁶ 10⁻⁵ 10⁻⁴ 10⁻Ź Anodic curve (Carbon steel) Eₙₒₐₐ,A Cathodic curve (Copper — O₂ red.) Eₙₒₐₐ,B Eₘᵤₓₑᵈ iᵍ ΔE = 0.33 V Key Principle The couple corrodes at Eₘᵤₓₑᵈ, between Eₙₒₐₐ,A and Eₙₒₐₐ,B. iᵍ determines anode loss rate.
    Figure 2: Evans diagram (Tafel extrapolation) illustrating mixed potential theory for a carbon steel (anode) / copper (cathode) galvanic couple in seawater. The anodic curve of carbon steel and cathodic curve of copper intersect at the mixed potential Emixed and galvanic current ig. Metal A corrodes at an accelerated rate above its natural icorr,A; metal B is cathodically protected. © metallurgyzone.com

    Engineering Prevention Strategies

    Galvanic corrosion is entirely preventable if recognised at the design stage. The four primary control strategies, which can be used independently or in combination, address each of the three necessary conditions.

    1. Materials Selection and Alloy Compatibility

    The most effective prevention measure is to select materials that occupy adjacent or overlapping positions in the galvanic series for the service electrolyte. A potential difference below 200 mV between coupled alloys is generally acceptable in most service environments; this is the basis of compatibility classifications in MIL-STD-889 and similar aerospace standards. Key practical rules:

    • Never couple carbon or low-alloy steel with copper alloys, graphite, or passive stainless steel in marine or conductive service environments without isolation or cathodic protection.
    • Aluminium alloys are highly susceptible to galvanic attack when coupled with copper, steel, or stainless steel. In aerospace structures, the 5000-series aluminium alloys (e.g., 5086) are preferred over 2000-series (2024) in marine service because of their lower corrosion potential difference from structural fastener materials.
    • 316L stainless steel, in its passive state, is compatible with titanium alloys (both noble), but both will accelerate corrosion of coupled carbon steel.
    • When dissimilar metals cannot be avoided, choose the largest possible anode-to-cathode area ratio: use the more active material for large components and the more noble material for small fasteners, not the reverse.

    2. Electrical Isolation

    Breaking the metallic electrical contact between dissimilar metals eliminates the galvanic current path. Isolation methods include:

    • Non-metallic washers and bushings: PTFE, nylon, or neoprene insulating washers and sleeves at bolted joints. Standard engineering practice in process plant, marine structures, and pipework flanges. Must achieve complete isolation; partial contact restores the galvanic circuit.
    • Insulating flange kits: Used in pipework where cathodic protection systems must be isolated from adjacent unprotected sections. Include insulating gaskets, sleeves for bolts, and insulating washers.
    • Dielectric unions: For pipe connections between dissimilar metals (e.g., copper domestic plumbing to galvanised steel), dielectric unions provide both mechanical connection and electrical isolation.
    • Insulating coatings as isolation: A well-maintained coating on either metal can functionally isolate the surfaces from the electrolyte, but coatings should not be relied upon as the sole barrier when the consequence of failure is severe, because holidays in coatings are inevitable.

    3. Coatings and Surface Treatments

    Protective coatings reduce the area of metal exposed to the electrolyte, reducing total galvanic current and protecting against general corrosion simultaneously. The critical rule for coating design in galvanic couples:

    Coating design rule: If the couple cannot be avoided, always coat the cathode in preference to the anode. Coating the anode and leaving the cathode bare creates a large-cathode / small-anode geometry at every coating holiday, concentrating galvanic attack and accelerating anode perforation. The ideal is to coat both surfaces; the cathode coating is the most critical.

    Metallic coatings can exploit galvanic effects deliberately. Hot-dip galvanising (zinc on steel) places a sacrificial anode coating on the steel substrate; zinc corrodes preferentially at cut edges and at coating defects, providing cathodic protection to the underlying steel. The zinc coating must be maintained thicker than the minimum required for the expected service life (≥85 µm for many structural applications per ISO 1461). Cadmium plating on steel provides similar sacrificial protection and was historically preferred in aerospace for its lubricating properties, though its use is now restricted due to toxicity (REACH regulation).

    4. Cathodic Protection

    Cathodic protection (CP) forces the structure to be protected to a sufficiently negative potential that corrosion reactions are thermodynamically and kinetically suppressed. Two methods are used:

    Sacrificial Anode CP

    Commercially pure zinc, aluminium alloy (Al-Zn-In or Al-Zn-Hg), or magnesium alloy anodes are electrically attached to the structure. Their corrosion potential is sufficiently negative to drive the structure potential below the protection criterion (typically −0.80 V vs Ag/AgCl for steel in seawater, per NACE SP0176 / ISO 15589-2). Zinc anodes are preferred for seawater (conductivity sufficient for adequate current distribution); magnesium anodes are preferred for soil and freshwater where seawater-composition zinc anodes would not provide adequate driving voltage. Cathodic protection design for offshore structures involves calculation of current demand, anode mass, and design life.

    Impressed Current CP

    An external DC power source drives current through inert anodes (platinised titanium, mixed metal oxide (MMO) coated titanium, or graphite) into the electrolyte and onto the structure. Impressed current CP provides more flexible and controllable protection than sacrificial anodes and is preferred for large structures (pipelines, jetties, tank bases) where the current demand would require an impractically large number of sacrificial anodes. Reference electrodes (Ag/AgCl, Cu/CuSO4, Zn) monitor the protection potential at representative locations.

    Industrial Case Studies and Standards

    In offshore oil and gas structures, the coupling of carbon steel jacket structures with stainless steel valves and fittings requires careful design. DNVGL-RP-B401 and ISO 15589-2 specify that mixed-material systems must account for the passive-active state of stainless steel components: if stainless steel enters crevice corrosion (active state) in the presence of a CP system maintaining the carbon steel at −0.80 V, the active stainless will also receive cathodic protection, but the passive stainless in adjacent locations presents a large cathode area that increases the total current demand. CP system design must model all metal couples present.

    In process plant, NACE MR0175 / ISO 15156 specifies materials resistant to sulphide stress cracking in sour service, but galvanic coupling of these materials with less resistant alloys is not directly addressed. The plant engineer must apply galvanic series data alongside general corrosion mechanism knowledge and ASTM G82 guidance. In aerospace, MIL-STD-889D classifies couples as Class 1 (no protection required), Class 2 (protection required in service environments) or Class 3 (protection always required), based on galvanic series position, service environment, and area ratio assessment.


    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is galvanic corrosion and what conditions are required for it to occur?
    Galvanic corrosion (bimetallic corrosion) occurs when two electrochemically dissimilar metals or alloys are in electrical contact in the presence of an electrolyte. Three conditions must coexist simultaneously: (1) an anode (more active metal) and a cathode (more noble metal) with a measurable potential difference, (2) an electrical path (metallic contact) between them, and (3) an ionic path (electrolyte — water, soil, humid atmosphere) completing the circuit. Remove any one condition and galvanic corrosion stops.
    What is the difference between the standard electrode potential series and the practical galvanic series?
    The standard electrode potential (SHE) series lists reduction potentials for pure metals in their own 1 mol/L ion solution at 25°C. The practical galvanic series lists the observed corrosion potentials (open-circuit potentials) of engineering alloys in a specific electrolyte, most commonly seawater. The two series differ significantly because engineering alloys (passivating alloys like stainless steel, titanium) have vastly different potentials depending on whether they are in the passive or active state. For engineering design, the galvanic series in the actual service electrolyte is far more useful than the SHE series.
    Why is the anode-to-cathode area ratio so critical in galvanic corrosion?
    The galvanic current is determined by the potential difference and the polarisation resistance of the couple. When this fixed current density is forced through a small anode area, the corrosion rate per unit area of the anode is very high. Conversely, a large anode area distributes the same current over more surface, reducing local corrosion rate. The most dangerous configuration is a small anode coupled to a large cathode, such as a carbon steel fastener in a copper plate or a stainless steel bolt in a carbon steel structure. The safest design uses a large anode relative to cathode, or avoids the couple entirely.
    What is the 200 mV rule of thumb for galvanic corrosion risk?
    A commonly applied engineering guideline is that couples with a potential difference less than 200 mV (0.2 V) in the service electrolyte pose low galvanic corrosion risk. Couples between 200 mV and 500 mV are moderate risk. Couples above 500 mV are high risk and require active mitigation. This 200 mV threshold is a practical guide, not a guarantee: aggressive or conductive electrolytes, small anode areas, or elevated temperature can cause significant corrosion at lower potential differences. The applicable standard ASTM G82 should be consulted for quantitative assessment.
    Does painting or coating the cathode help prevent galvanic corrosion?
    Coating the cathode is far more effective than coating the anode for reducing galvanic corrosion. If the anode is painted and the coating has a small defect (holiday), all the galvanic current concentrates on the small exposed anode area, dramatically accelerating local corrosion. Coating the cathode reduces the cathodic area, reduces total galvanic current, and distributes remaining current over a larger anode area. The worst practice is to paint only the anode: it creates the dangerous small-anode, large-cathode configuration at every coating defect. Best practice is to coat both, with the cathode coating being the most critical.
    How does stainless steel behave in a galvanic couple?
    Stainless steel can act as either a noble (cathodic) or an active (anodic) member depending on its passivation state and the other metal in the couple. In the passive state, stainless steel (especially 316L) is relatively noble and will accelerate corrosion of coupled carbon steel, aluminium, or zinc. In the active state — typically caused by chloride-induced breakdown of the passive film in crevices or at weld heat-affected zones — stainless steel shifts to a much more active potential and may corrode aggressively. This is why passive/active transitions are shown separately in the galvanic series and why 316L performs better than 304 in chloride environments due to molybdenum-stabilised passivity.
    What is sacrificial anode cathodic protection and how does it relate to galvanic corrosion?
    Sacrificial anode cathodic protection deliberately exploits galvanic corrosion to protect a structure. A metal more active than the structure (typically zinc, aluminium alloy, or magnesium) is electrically connected to it. The active metal (sacrificial anode) corrodes preferentially, supplying protective current to the structure (cathode). The structure is driven to a potential below its corrosion potential, stopping or greatly reducing its corrosion. Common applications include zinc anodes on ship hulls, aluminium anodes on offshore platforms, and magnesium anodes on buried pipelines and hot water tanks.
    Can galvanic corrosion occur in atmospheric (non-immersed) service?
    Yes, although at slower rates than in full immersion. A thin electrolyte film formed by condensation, rain, or high-humidity atmospheres is sufficient to complete the galvanic circuit. Marine and industrial atmospheres, which contain salt aerosols and acidic pollutants, are much more corrosive than rural atmospheres. Galvanic corrosion of aluminium alloy components fastened with stainless steel bolts is a common example in aerospace and marine structures exposed to humid or marine atmospheres. Effective sealing and drainage design to prevent moisture retention at bimetallic joints is therefore essential in atmospheric service.
    What standards govern galvanic corrosion testing and material compatibility assessment?
    Key standards include: ASTM G82 (Guide for Development and Use of a Galvanic Series for Predicting Galvanic Corrosion Performance); ASTM G71 (Conducting and Evaluating Galvanic Corrosion Tests in Electrolytes); ISO 7441 (Corrosion of metals and alloys — Determination of bimetallic corrosion in outdoor exposure tests); MIL-STD-889 (Dissimilar Metals), which classifies metal couples by corrosion risk class for military and aerospace equipment; and NACE SP0176 / ISO 15589 for cathodic protection design. ASM Handbook Vol. 13A and Fontana’s Corrosion Engineering provide comprehensive galvanic series data and design guidance.

    Recommended References and Tools

    Corrosion Engineering — Fontana (3rd Ed.)

    The definitive classical corrosion engineering text. Covers all eight forms of corrosion including galvanic, with worked examples, case studies, and data tables for galvanic series and corrosion rates.

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    Corrosion Test Coupons — Weight Loss Method (ASTM G1/G31)

    Precision corrosion test coupons for weight loss assessment, galvanic couple testing, and immersion corrosion rate measurement. Standard geometry for ASTM G1 and G31 protocols.

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    Digital pH Meter — Lab Grade Portable

    Calibrated portable pH meter for on-site electrolyte characterisation, process water chemistry monitoring, and corrosion inhibitor efficacy testing in plant and laboratory environments.

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    Magnaflux Spotcheck Dye Penetrant Testing Kit

    Professional dye penetrant (PT) kit for detection of surface-breaking cracks and defects in weldments and corrosion-damaged components. Includes cleaner, penetrant, and developer.

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    Further Reading

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