How Seawater Sabotages Ships: Crash Course Engineering #43?

Seawater is like a sneaky enemy that can make even the strongest ships feel tired and weak.

Seawater has something called salt, which is kind of like tiny crystals that don’t want to be ignored. When seawater gets inside a ship, maybe through cracks or holes, it starts working its way into all the nooks and crannies, especially where metal parts are used. These parts, like steel, can feel like they're being attacked by little soldiers who never stop fighting.

How Salt Ruins Ships

Think of a ship’s body like a big cookie made out of steel. When seawater gets inside it, the salt starts to make the cookie soggy, and then it turns into a mushy mess over time. This process is called corrosion, and it's like when your favorite toy gets rusty because you left it outside in the rain.

Over many years, this salty water can cause big parts of the ship to fall apart or get weaker, just like how your cookie might break if you try to eat it after being soggy for too long. This is why ships need to be fixed and cleaned often so they don’t feel like they're falling apart in the middle of the ocean!

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Examples

  1. A ship's hull starts to rust because seawater is salty and reacts with the metal.
  2. Rust forms when salt in water mixes with iron on a ship’s surface.
  3. Over time, seawater can eat through the bottom of a ship like acid.

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