Why lowering the pH increases the corrosion rates? lowering the pH increases the rates of cathodic reduction, so how this increases the rates of anodic reactions?
Metals typically develop a passivation layer in moderately alkaline (high pH) solutions, which lowers the corrosion rate as compared to acidic (low pH) solutions. The passivation layer provides a measure of immunity to further corrosion (e.g. Ti, Ta).
However, the corrosion rates can be expected to be comparable in the transpassive region (i.e. highly alkaline versus highly acidic)
The question is complex enough to give answer with general validity, but typically, metal oxides/hydroxides covers the surface to save it, and these can be formed in alkaline but dissolved in acidic environment. Furthermore, the corrosion is an electrochemical process, and H+-concn. has role in it (Nernst eq.).