Interesting guys....
I am not good with chemistry but I use alot of stainless steel on yachts where I work on.
I know that stainless steel can have two situation where it can be passive or active. So it can be in rust mode or no-rust mode.
We on boats use sacrificial zinc anode to prevent galvanic corrosion because each metal has difference voltage potential, stick one to another and the less noble metal will corrode in sea water, the battery effect. So we tie all underwater metals with a bonding cable ( copper )and run that cable to a zinc anode for it to be a sacrificed because zinc is one of the lowest in the galvanic scale. I believe some water heater has sacrificial zinc anode too.
Now back to stainless steel. We know that 316L ( L = low carbon ) has the best corossion resistance, 304 is averagely good.
However stainless steel actually will
corrode faster when it
does not come in contact with oxygen ( active ) and when oxygen is sufficient it will become passive. I don't know if in a situation above 21% oxygen.
In a boat fitting where we use stainless steel, where airflow or waterflow can not go nicely around the stainless steel, there's where the rust will be. For example a base of a a stainless steel ladder where it touches the boat fiberglass and being screwed on and sealed with polyurethane sealant for water proofing. Stainless steel pipe fittings where the threads are partially covered by teflon tape. All screws on a boat swim platform where grime and dirt from the water sometimes create a film making oxygen flow to screws hampered. All the the threads of stainless steel screws that sank inside the fiberglass swimplatform, guaranteed corossion.
Swimplatform often has stainless steel supporting frames made out of SS pipes, part of it submerged in water attached to the boat hull and part of it hang out of the water ( to the swimplatform actually ) because when boat is empty, a swimplatform is usually 5-6 inches above water. The part of the supporting pipe that gets water all the time is always much less rusty than those in open air. The slime and dirt from the water does give the same slime that prevents good air exchange for the SS pipes that are in air.
Propeller shaft for boats are from stainless steel family but with different mix for strength, the part where we have the big bolts on the shaft to secure the propellers, crevice corrosion sometimes do occur on the threads. Stainless steel is not the best underwater metal actually but it is the most common.
Take a SS bolt and a nut, throw it in salty water or sea water. Where the threads of the bolt gets "covered" by the nut. that's where we will see the corrossion. As far as for PH effect on stainless steel, I don't know but if I am not wrong 316L can withstand high acidic condition.
For marine engine heat exchanger, we use cupro-nickel ( 30% nickle and 70% copper ). For high end German engines, they use titanium heat exchanger. Heat exchanger is like a pool heater, its just opposite application. One remove heat, the other add heat. Stainless steel is never used as heat exchanger on marine engines, most probably due to the fact that it does not do well in conducting heat as copper would and probably that poor poor property when corrosive waterflow is stagnant. Temperature accelerate corrosion of metal in salty water to a great deal, much worse than water velocity. If there is a cupro-nickel type pool heater, I am sure it will do well in salt water pool. I don't need a pool heater so I never pay attention to what the market offer.
That's all I can contribute for metal corrosion in water...pool, saltwater pool..whatever..
