“…Titanium and its alloys, as typical passive metals, exhibit strong resistance to seawater corrosion due to their compact and stable titanium oxide passive films on the surface. − Therefore, these materials are widely used in marine engineering structures, ship hulls, and seawater desalination plants. − Chloride ion (Cl – ) and fluoride ion (F – ) are the primary corrosive anions to be considered in seawater, with concentrations of 19,000 and 1.3 mg/L, respectively. , They may even be concentrated multiple times in industrial wastewater and seawater desalination. Previous research examined the corrosion electrochemical behavior of corresponding ions. ,, Under neutral room-temperature conditions, halogen ions generally promote spontaneous passivation of the passivation film through a dissolution formation mechanism . The initial step is to attack the titanium passivation film with halogen ions to form titanium halide .…”