| The effects and mechanistic roles of a minor alloying element, Ni, on the localized corrosion behavior were explored by studying (Al75Cu 17Mg8)97Ni3 and Al70Cu 18Mg12 amorphous alloys. To explore the minor alloying element limited to the outer surface layers, the corrosion behavior of Al70Cu 18Mg12 amorphous alloy in solutions with and without Ni 2+ was also studied.;Both Ni alloying and Ni2+ in solution improved the localized corrosion resistance of the alloys by ennobling the pitting and repassivation potentials. Pit growth by the selective dissolution of Al and Mg was also suppressed by Ni alloying. Remaining Cu and Ni reorganized into a Cu-rich polycrystalline nanoporous structure with continuous ligaments in pits. The minor Ni alloying and Ni2+ in solution suppressed the coarsening of the ligaments in the dealloyed nanoporous structure. The presence of relatively immobile Ni atoms at the surface suppressed the surface diffusion of Cu, which reduced the coarsening of the nanoporous structure, resulting in the formation of 10 to 30 nm wide Cu ligaments.;Two mechanistic roles of minor alloying elements in the improvement of the pitting corrosion resistance of the solid solution alloys are elucidated. The first role is the suppression of active dissolution by altering the atomic structure. Ni in solid solution formed stronger bonds with Al, and reduces the probability of weaker Al-Al bonds. The second role is to hinder dissolution by producing a greater negative shift of the true interfacial potential at the dissolution front under the dealloyed layer due to the greater Ohmic resistance through the finer porous structure. These effects contributed to the elevation of pitting potentials by ennobling the applied potential required to produce enough dissolution for the stabilization of pits.;Scientifically, this thesis advances the state of understanding of alloy dissolution, particularly the role of minor alloying elements on preferential oxidation at the atomic, nanometer, and micrometer scales. Technological implementations of the findings of the research are also discussed, including a new route to synthesize nanoporous materials with tunable porosity and new corrosion mitigation strategies for commercial Al-based alloys containing the detrimental Al2CuMg phase. |