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In a context where material durability is essential for the safety of infrastructures and the promotion of a sustainable energy transition, mastering corrosion phenomena represents a major challenge for key sectors such as decarbonized energy transport through buried pipelines and civil engineering (hydrogen, nuclear, underground infrastructures). The CORPORE project addresses this issue by proposing the development of advanced numerical simulation models to study corrosion in porous media using COMSOL Multiphysics.
The main scientific and technological objective is to establish an integrated multiphysics modeling approach for the electrochemical and transport mechanisms within porous materials: studying the coupled influence of chemistry, pore network properties, and material–environment interactions on the initiation and propagation of corrosion.
This approach will help optimize anticorrosion protection strategies, reduce maintenance costs, and extend the service life of structures. From a state-of-the-art perspective, most current models focus on homogeneous media and compartmentalized approaches. Our project stands out by integrating a multi-scale mechanistic modeling framework combined with the use of archaeological data for long-term validation.
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