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The Effect of Vanadate, Phosphate, Fluoride Compounds on the Aqueous Corrosion of Magnesium Alloy AZ31 in Dilute Chloride Solutions

The anodic polarization response of magnesium alloy AZ31 was first characterized during exposure to aerated 0.1 M NaCl solutions with millimolar additions of NaVO(3), Na(3)PO(4), Na(2)HPO(4), NaF and various pairings to assess their ability to inhibit corrosion kinetics and retard localized corrosio...

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Autores principales: Feng, Zhiyuan, Li, Jichao, Yang, Zi, Buchheit, Rudolph
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7142557/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32183324
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma13061325
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author Feng, Zhiyuan
Li, Jichao
Yang, Zi
Buchheit, Rudolph
author_facet Feng, Zhiyuan
Li, Jichao
Yang, Zi
Buchheit, Rudolph
author_sort Feng, Zhiyuan
collection PubMed
description The anodic polarization response of magnesium alloy AZ31 was first characterized during exposure to aerated 0.1 M NaCl solutions with millimolar additions of NaVO(3), Na(3)PO(4), Na(2)HPO(4), NaF and various pairings to assess their ability to inhibit corrosion kinetics and retard localized corrosion. Each of the candidate inhibitors reduced the corrosion rate of the alloy to some degree. A Na(3)PO(4)–NaVO(3) pair produced a good inhibiting effect decreasing the corrosion rate to about 10(−7) A/cm(2), which was two orders of magnitude lower than the uninhibited control case. A Bliss Independence assessment indicated that this inhibitor pair acted synergistically. A Na(2)HPO(4)–NaVO(3) pair reduced the corrosion rate to 10(−6) A/cm(2) but was not assessed to be acting synergistically. The NaVO(3)–NaF pair did not reduce the corrosion rate significantly compared to the control case and was an antagonistic pairing. SEM imaging showed film formation due to exposure, which appears to be the origin of the observed inhibition. The resistance to localized corrosion was assessed as the difference in the breakdown potential and the corrosion potential, with larger values indicating a lower probability of localized corrosion during free corrosion exposures. The effects of the inhibitors on this characteristic were mixed, but each of the inhibitor pairs yielded potential differences in excess of 100 mV. A conceptual conversion coating process based on a mixture of vanadate and phosphate compounds were demonstrated. A fluoride-bearing formulation produced coatings whose total impedance was increased by a factor of two compared to an uncoated control. A fluoride-free formulation produced coatings whose corrosion resistance was increased by more than a factor of three.
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spelling pubmed-71425572020-04-15 The Effect of Vanadate, Phosphate, Fluoride Compounds on the Aqueous Corrosion of Magnesium Alloy AZ31 in Dilute Chloride Solutions Feng, Zhiyuan Li, Jichao Yang, Zi Buchheit, Rudolph Materials (Basel) Article The anodic polarization response of magnesium alloy AZ31 was first characterized during exposure to aerated 0.1 M NaCl solutions with millimolar additions of NaVO(3), Na(3)PO(4), Na(2)HPO(4), NaF and various pairings to assess their ability to inhibit corrosion kinetics and retard localized corrosion. Each of the candidate inhibitors reduced the corrosion rate of the alloy to some degree. A Na(3)PO(4)–NaVO(3) pair produced a good inhibiting effect decreasing the corrosion rate to about 10(−7) A/cm(2), which was two orders of magnitude lower than the uninhibited control case. A Bliss Independence assessment indicated that this inhibitor pair acted synergistically. A Na(2)HPO(4)–NaVO(3) pair reduced the corrosion rate to 10(−6) A/cm(2) but was not assessed to be acting synergistically. The NaVO(3)–NaF pair did not reduce the corrosion rate significantly compared to the control case and was an antagonistic pairing. SEM imaging showed film formation due to exposure, which appears to be the origin of the observed inhibition. The resistance to localized corrosion was assessed as the difference in the breakdown potential and the corrosion potential, with larger values indicating a lower probability of localized corrosion during free corrosion exposures. The effects of the inhibitors on this characteristic were mixed, but each of the inhibitor pairs yielded potential differences in excess of 100 mV. A conceptual conversion coating process based on a mixture of vanadate and phosphate compounds were demonstrated. A fluoride-bearing formulation produced coatings whose total impedance was increased by a factor of two compared to an uncoated control. A fluoride-free formulation produced coatings whose corrosion resistance was increased by more than a factor of three. MDPI 2020-03-14 /pmc/articles/PMC7142557/ /pubmed/32183324 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma13061325 Text en © 2020 by the authors. 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Feng, Zhiyuan
Li, Jichao
Yang, Zi
Buchheit, Rudolph
The Effect of Vanadate, Phosphate, Fluoride Compounds on the Aqueous Corrosion of Magnesium Alloy AZ31 in Dilute Chloride Solutions
title The Effect of Vanadate, Phosphate, Fluoride Compounds on the Aqueous Corrosion of Magnesium Alloy AZ31 in Dilute Chloride Solutions
title_full The Effect of Vanadate, Phosphate, Fluoride Compounds on the Aqueous Corrosion of Magnesium Alloy AZ31 in Dilute Chloride Solutions
title_fullStr The Effect of Vanadate, Phosphate, Fluoride Compounds on the Aqueous Corrosion of Magnesium Alloy AZ31 in Dilute Chloride Solutions
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Vanadate, Phosphate, Fluoride Compounds on the Aqueous Corrosion of Magnesium Alloy AZ31 in Dilute Chloride Solutions
title_short The Effect of Vanadate, Phosphate, Fluoride Compounds on the Aqueous Corrosion of Magnesium Alloy AZ31 in Dilute Chloride Solutions
title_sort effect of vanadate, phosphate, fluoride compounds on the aqueous corrosion of magnesium alloy az31 in dilute chloride solutions
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7142557/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32183324
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma13061325
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