From Scratch Closure to Electrolyte Barrier Restoration in Self-Healing Polyurethane Coatings

Journal Article (2021)
Author(s)

Vincenzo Montano (TU Delft - Novel Aerospace Materials)

Wouter Vogel (Croda International Plc)

Angela Smits (Croda International Plc)

Sybrand Van der ZWAAG (TU Delft - Novel Aerospace Materials)

S.J. García (TU Delft - Novel Aerospace Materials)

Research Group
Novel Aerospace Materials
Copyright
© 2021 V. Montano, Wouter Vogel, Angela Smits, S. van der Zwaag, Santiago J. Garcia
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsapm.1c00323
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Copyright
© 2021 V. Montano, Wouter Vogel, Angela Smits, S. van der Zwaag, Santiago J. Garcia
Research Group
Novel Aerospace Materials
Issue number
5
Volume number
3
Pages (from-to)
2802-2812
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Abstract

The effects of the soft block fraction and H-bond state in thermoplastic polyurethanes on autonomous entropy-driven scratch closure and barrier restoration are studied. To this aim, comparable polyurethanes with different segmentation states are applied as organic coatings on plain carbon steel plates, scratched under very well-controlled conditions, and the scratch closure and sealing kinetics are studied in detail. The scratch closure is measured optically, while the barrier restoration is probed by the accelerated cyclic electrochemical technique (ACET). Scratch closure, attributed to entropic elastic recovery (EER), is followed in a marked two-step process by barrier restoration governed by local viscous flow and the state of the interfacial hydrogen bonding. Polyurethanes with a lower soft phase fraction lead to a higher urea/urethane ratio, which in turn influences the healing efficiency of each healing step. Interestingly, softer polyurethanes leading to efficient crack closure were unable to sufficiently restore barrier properties. The present work highlights the critical role of the soft/hard block and urea/urethane H-bond state content on crack closure and barrier restoration of anticorrosive organic coatings and points at design rules for the design of more efficient corrosion-protective self-healing polyurethanes.