Corrosion Inhibition at Scribed Locations in Coated AA2024-T3 by Cerium- and DMTD-Loaded Natural Silica Microparticles under Continuous Immersion and Wet/Dry Cyclic Exposure

Journal Article (2020)
Authors

P.J. Denissen (Novel Aerospace Materials)

Viacheslav Shkirskiy (Institut de Recherche de Chimie Paris)

Polina Volovitch (Institut de Recherche de Chimie Paris)

S. J. García (Novel Aerospace Materials)

Research Group
Novel Aerospace Materials
Copyright
© 2020 P.J. Denissen, Viacheslav Shkirskiy, Polina Volovitch, Santiago J. Garcia
To reference this document use:
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.0c03368
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Copyright
© 2020 P.J. Denissen, Viacheslav Shkirskiy, Polina Volovitch, Santiago J. Garcia
Research Group
Novel Aerospace Materials
Issue number
20
Volume number
12
Pages (from-to)
23417-23431
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.0c03368
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Abstract

Earlier studies on cerium-loaded naturally occurring silica microparticles (i.e., diatomaceous earth) demonstrated the potential to efficiently protect small scratches in epoxy-coated AA2024-T3 panels during relatively short immersion times. The current work investigates the potential of such inhibitor-loaded microparticles to protect wide and deep scribes (up to 1 mm wide) in long-time immersion testing and during cyclic (wet/dry) conditions. For this, cerium nitrate and 2,5-dimercaptothiadiazole (DMTD) were used as inorganic and organic corrosion inhibitors. The corrosion protection was evaluated using a hyphenated real-time optics/electrochemistry method and two individual local techniques measuring oxygen concentration and electrochemical impedance (LEIM) inside the scribe. SEM/EDS was used to analyze the samples after exposure. The results show significant levels of corrosion protection at damaged locations at low cerium concentrations (3.7 wt % Ce3+ relative to the total coating mass) during 30 days of immersion in salt solution. However, for a given scribe geometry, the protection was found to be dependent on the electrolyte volume with larger electrolyte/exposed metal ratios leading to short protection time. A partial replacement of the Ce3+ by DMTD in the microcarriers resulted in a higher degree of passivation than when DMTD was used alone. Wet/dry cyclic exposure tests showed that cyclic conditions can increase the buildup of stable inhibitor-containing layers in the case of cerium-loaded silica microparticles. This underlines the need for more research using wet/dry exposure conditions.