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Ken Vlach |
Its useless to passivate first, then Electropolish because the electropolish process eats through way past any pre-existing passivation layer. And electropolish process itself provides fine, and often superior passivation. You can find Auger & Esca data demonstrating this for well run processes with a google search. Often you will find Nitric or Citric Acid final passivation at the end of an electropolish sequence. But I've usally found the epolish surface to be inert to the acids at that point, indicating the part is already fully passivated.
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Dave Kinghorn |
Citric acid passivation will not etch the surface or change the finish like nitric acid does. As was previously mentioned, passivation should be performed after electropolishing, not before.
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Ray Kremer |
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