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Construction and Performance of Superhydrophobic Surfaces for Rusted Iron Artifacts

Ancient iron artifacts need to be protected with a rust layer, often stabilized by tannic acid corrosion inhibition. In humid environments, water vapor could slowly penetrate and trigger galvanic corrosion of metal artefacts. Sealing treatments are generally applied to the artefact surface to isolat...

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Autores principales: Hu, Pei, Jia, Minghao, Xu, Hao, Zhang, Xiaogu, Hu, Dongbo, Hu, Gang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10051750/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36984059
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma16062180
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author Hu, Pei
Jia, Minghao
Xu, Hao
Zhang, Xiaogu
Hu, Dongbo
Hu, Gang
author_facet Hu, Pei
Jia, Minghao
Xu, Hao
Zhang, Xiaogu
Hu, Dongbo
Hu, Gang
author_sort Hu, Pei
collection PubMed
description Ancient iron artifacts need to be protected with a rust layer, often stabilized by tannic acid corrosion inhibition. In humid environments, water vapor could slowly penetrate and trigger galvanic corrosion of metal artefacts. Sealing treatments are generally applied to the artefact surface to isolate water and enhance its corrosion resistance. Superhydrophobic modifications could effectively block the penetration of moisture into the interior of the artefact and provide a nice water barrier. Stearic acid with tannic acid inhibition treatment creates a superhydrophobic protective layer on the surface of rusted iron artifacts and enhances corrosion resistance effectively. Various scientific analyses and testing methods are used in this paper to evaluate the corrosion resistance of rusted surfaces after superhydrophobic modification and investigate the reaction mechanisms. The results indicate that the contact angle of the rusted surface after corrosion inhibition by tannic acid and modified by stearic acid is increased to 152.2°, which means the superhydrophobic protective layer has been successfully constructed. The C/Fe ratio of the rusted surface is increased from 0.21 to 2.10, and the characteristic diffraction peaks of O1s and Fe 2p(3/2) shift toward higher binding energy. Stearic acid is combined with the corrosion product layer by chemical bonding. Chelation between rust products, tannic acid, and steric acid is effective, and the chelate is chemically stable. The superhydrophobic surface forms a lamellar wax-like layer as an air barrier to isolate liquid water, resulting in a significant decrease in corrosion current and an increase in Warburg impedance to 217.9 times the original state, with a protection efficiency of 88.3%. Tannic acid corrosion inhibition and stearic acid superhydrophobic modification have an excellent synergistic protective effect on improving the corrosion resistance of iron artifacts, resulting in better corrosion resistance of iron artifact materials. The research provides new ideas and references for the protection of ancient iron artifacts sealing.
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spelling pubmed-100517502023-03-30 Construction and Performance of Superhydrophobic Surfaces for Rusted Iron Artifacts Hu, Pei Jia, Minghao Xu, Hao Zhang, Xiaogu Hu, Dongbo Hu, Gang Materials (Basel) Article Ancient iron artifacts need to be protected with a rust layer, often stabilized by tannic acid corrosion inhibition. In humid environments, water vapor could slowly penetrate and trigger galvanic corrosion of metal artefacts. Sealing treatments are generally applied to the artefact surface to isolate water and enhance its corrosion resistance. Superhydrophobic modifications could effectively block the penetration of moisture into the interior of the artefact and provide a nice water barrier. Stearic acid with tannic acid inhibition treatment creates a superhydrophobic protective layer on the surface of rusted iron artifacts and enhances corrosion resistance effectively. Various scientific analyses and testing methods are used in this paper to evaluate the corrosion resistance of rusted surfaces after superhydrophobic modification and investigate the reaction mechanisms. The results indicate that the contact angle of the rusted surface after corrosion inhibition by tannic acid and modified by stearic acid is increased to 152.2°, which means the superhydrophobic protective layer has been successfully constructed. The C/Fe ratio of the rusted surface is increased from 0.21 to 2.10, and the characteristic diffraction peaks of O1s and Fe 2p(3/2) shift toward higher binding energy. Stearic acid is combined with the corrosion product layer by chemical bonding. Chelation between rust products, tannic acid, and steric acid is effective, and the chelate is chemically stable. The superhydrophobic surface forms a lamellar wax-like layer as an air barrier to isolate liquid water, resulting in a significant decrease in corrosion current and an increase in Warburg impedance to 217.9 times the original state, with a protection efficiency of 88.3%. Tannic acid corrosion inhibition and stearic acid superhydrophobic modification have an excellent synergistic protective effect on improving the corrosion resistance of iron artifacts, resulting in better corrosion resistance of iron artifact materials. The research provides new ideas and references for the protection of ancient iron artifacts sealing. MDPI 2023-03-08 /pmc/articles/PMC10051750/ /pubmed/36984059 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma16062180 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Hu, Pei
Jia, Minghao
Xu, Hao
Zhang, Xiaogu
Hu, Dongbo
Hu, Gang
Construction and Performance of Superhydrophobic Surfaces for Rusted Iron Artifacts
title Construction and Performance of Superhydrophobic Surfaces for Rusted Iron Artifacts
title_full Construction and Performance of Superhydrophobic Surfaces for Rusted Iron Artifacts
title_fullStr Construction and Performance of Superhydrophobic Surfaces for Rusted Iron Artifacts
title_full_unstemmed Construction and Performance of Superhydrophobic Surfaces for Rusted Iron Artifacts
title_short Construction and Performance of Superhydrophobic Surfaces for Rusted Iron Artifacts
title_sort construction and performance of superhydrophobic surfaces for rusted iron artifacts
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10051750/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36984059
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma16062180
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