Abstract
Regularities of the phase protective layer formation in multicomponent systems involving inhibitors with different mechanism of protective action have been investigated. It was shown that optimization of the composition of the inhibition mixture allows to obtain higher protective efficiency owing to improved microstructure of the phase layer. It was found that mechanism of the film formation in the presence of NaNO2-PHMG is due to deposition of slightly soluble PHMG-Fe complexes on the metal surface. On the basis of the proposed mechanism, the advanced surface engineering methods for obtaining nanoscaled and sub-nanostructured functional coatings may be developed.
Explore related subjects
Discover the latest articles, news and stories from top researchers in related subjects.Avoid common mistakes on your manuscript.
Background
Protection of metals under different conditions in various environments remains the important issue for science and technology. Recent advances in research of the nanoscaled systems allow the development of simple and inexpensive methods for obtaining nanostructured protective coatings with improved functional properties [1–5].
The protection mechanism of certain types of corrosion inhibitors is based on the formation of the phase protective layers on the metal surface. Among them, one may list the inorganic passivators that facilitate the formation of the dense oxide or salt protective films and complexing type inhibitors that are forming phase metalorganic layers. The mechanism of protective activity of the complexing type inhibitors consists in the formation of slightly soluble complexes of organic ligands with the metal ions. Deposition of such compounds on the metal surface in form of the phase layers leads to the gradual decrease in corrosion rate thus providing the efficient anticorrosive protection. The crucial parameters for ensuring high protective efficiency of the complexing type inhibitors are the high stability and low solubility of complexes with the cations of the metal being protected [6, 7].
Establishing regularities of the phase layer formation processes in multicomponent systems on a nano- and sub-nanoscale will enable the development of novel surface engineering techniques for obtaining functional coatings with desired functional properties.
The present study aimed to investigate the joint action of the inhibitors with different protective mechanism as well as their influence on the phase layer microstructure and achieved anticorrosive efficiency.
Methods
The studied materials were as follows: steels 08kp and 20, corrosion environment—aqueous saline solutions with compositions of 0.3 g/l NaCl, 0.3 g/l Na2SO4, and 0.3 g/l NaHCO3, inhibitors—NaNO2, Na2SiO3, polyhexamethylene guanidine (PHMG), and their isomolar mixtures (with total concentration of 30 mmol/l).
Corrosion tests and determination of the inhibitor efficiency were performed gravimetrically according to the standard procedure. For this purpose, specimens were exposed into corrosion environment for different times from 72 to 168 h. The ratio of solution volume (ml) to the area of metal sample (cm2) was a 10:1. The inhibition efficiency was determined by the equation \( Z=\left[\left({K}_m-{K}_m^{\hbox{'}}\right)/{K}_m\right]\cdot 100\% \), the inhibition coefficient − by the equation \( \gamma ={K}_m/{K}_m^{\hbox{'}} \), where \( {K}_m,{K}_m^{\hbox{'}}- \) the corrosion rate of metal in solutions without and with inhibitor correspondingly (K m = Δm/(S ⋅ τ), where Δm − the loss of the sample weight, g; S − the sample area, m2; τ − exposure time, h).
Polarization measurements were carried out in potentiostatic regime in a three-electrode cell with separated cathodic and anodic compartments. Carbon steel was used as the working electrode, platinum—as the counter-electrode and an Ag|AgCl|KCl (sat.) electrode—as the reference one. In this paper, the potential values are given with respect to the normal hydrogen electrode potential.
The morphological characteristics and elemental composition of the films were carried out with the scanning electron microscope (EVO-50, Zeiss, Germany) equipped with the energy-dispersive detector (INCA PENTA FET × 3, Oxford Instruments, Co., UK). Elemental analysis of the protective thin films has been carried out using Auger microprobe JAMP-9500F in the scanning electron microscopy mode.
Investigation of the complex formation process and geometry optimization has been carried out with a hybrid QM/MM approach using NWchem 6.5 computational chemistry package [8].
Results and Discussion
The results of gravimetric tests show high protective efficiency of NaNO2 in aqueous saline solutions. The inhibition efficiency reaches a value of 99.2% at the sodium nitrite concentration of 30 mmol/l. The polarization measurements in the presence of 30 mmol/l NaNO2 show the potential shift toward the positive side that leads to increased corrosion resistance of the carbon steel. The passive zone extends on a wide range of potentials with significant drop in current density (Fig. 1).
The protection mechanism of NaNO2 usually attributed to its ability to facilitate the formation of dense Fe3O4 or mixed oxide films that prevent further corrosion damage [9]. Such properties may be associated with the electronic structure of NO2 − ion due to the presence of lone pair of electrons in sp2-hybrid orbital that provides with the electron-donor properties in contrast to NO3 − ions that do not exhibit protective properties (Fig. 2).
SEM images of the samples immersed into the NaNO2 solution reveal the significant changes in the morphology attributed to the formation of protective film as well as signs of corrosion attack (Fig. 3 c, d). While the gravimetric measurements have shown high inhibitive efficiency, the surface morphology has significant amount of localized corrosion damage. The Auger spectroscopy has been employed to investigate the elemental composition of the protective layer. Obtained results indicate presence of the iron oxide and are found to be in a good agreement with theoretical expectations. Local types of corrosion such as pitting are considered as the most dangerous ones; hence, this drawback must be addressed during development of the inhibitive compositions based on sodium nitrite.
To achieve the synergistic effect, the inhibitive composition should combine the components with different mechanism of the anticorrosive action [10–13]. The inhibition mechanism of Na2SiO3 is attributed to a formation of slightly soluble silicates of iron on the metal surface. The distribution of the protective efficiency within the NaNO2-Na2SiO3 inhibitive mixture in relation to the concentration ratio of the components has been obtained using the isomolar series method (Fig. 4). The regularity shows extreme character reaching peak value of z = 99.97% at the concentration ratio NaNO2-Na2SiO3 as 1:2, which is higher than protective efficiency of both individual components.
Polarization measurements for this mixture are found to be in a good agreement with the gravimetric studies (Fig. 1). The inhibitive composition of NaNO2-Na2SiO3 ensures significant drop in the current density in a wide range of potentials that correspond to a passive state of the surface. SEM images reveal significantly improved morphology of the protective film formed in presence of the NaNO2-Na2SiO3 mixture compared to sole sodium nitrite solution (Fig. 4f). Obtained protective film has continuous structure without signs of pitting corrosion. Elemental composition of the protective layer showed presence of the silicon that indicates direct participation of SiO3 2− ions in the film formation process. While the NaNO2-Na2SiO3 mixture showed significant improvement in inhibition coefficient over sole sodium nitrite, the most valuable outcome of the composition optimization is greatly enhanced efficiency toward local corrosion damage.
To ensure reliable corrosion protection for diverse applications, the inhibitive composition should provide efficient reduction in corrosion rate (in wide range of pH and) under elevated temperature conditions. At the same time, it was found that NaNO2-Na2SiO3 mixture demonstrates high protective efficiency at room temperature, while the protection coefficient declines as the temperature rises.
Further improvement in protective performance may be achieved by combining inorganic passivator with organic ligands that could form complexes with the metal ions. The mechanism of protective activity of complexing type inhibitors for acidic medium has been proposed and extensively studied over the last decade [6, 7]. In such systems, protective layers are formed as a result of formation of the slightly soluble complexes of added organic ligands and the metal cations. Deposition of such compounds leads to the formation of the phase metalorganic layers on the metal surface and subsequent decrease in corrosion rate. Thus, application of complexing type inhibitors allows one to implement in situ surface modification for obtaining hybrid protective and functional coatings.
Polyhexamethylene guanidine (PHMG) showed high inhibitive efficiency for protection of carbon steel in acidic medium [6, 7, 13, 14] while exhibiting moderate performance in neutral aqueous saline solutions. Gravimetric measurements showed that PHMG provides 40% corrosion protection at the concentration of 30 mmol/l.
Relatively low efficiency of sole PHMG may be attributed to the fact that according to the protection mechanism of complexing type inhibitors, the corrosion process should provide sufficient amount of Fe2+ ions for the complexation. Suchlike state is spontaneously established and maintained in acidic medium, while in neutral aqueous saline solutions, such conditions should be engineered according the Pourbaix diagram for the particular system. Hence, sodium nitrite can stimulate the localized pitting attack; it may indirectly facilitate to establishing of the favorable conditions and engage the complexing type component of the inhibitive mixture. In addition, PHMG protection performance tends to increase under elevated temperature conditions that being combined with NaNO2 may further improve the efficiency of such mixture.
The isomolar series method showed a sharp increase in the protective efficiency with addition of sodium nitrite while the peak value of 99.8% is reached at the concentration ratio NaNO2-PHMG as 2:1 (Fig. 5). Polarization measurements are found to be in a good agreement with gravimetrical tests. Analysis of the polarization curves showed that electrochemical behavior of the NaNO2-PHMG mixture is close to sole NaNO2 with extended passive zone in a wide range of potentials at the early stages of the measurements, while acting similar to PHMG at the later stages.
Investigation of the surface morphology after immersion in the solution with PHMG (Fig. 6a) expectedly shows significant amount of corrosion products mixed with organic inclusions that is also consistent with the Auger spectroscopy results (Fig. 7a, Table 1). Whereas in the case of NaNO2-PHMG mixture, the surface morphology is in almost pristine condition (Fig. 6b) while the elemental composition of the surface layer indicates presence of the protective film of mainly organic nature (Fig. 7b, Table 1).
Further analysis of the Auger spectra indicates the formation of nanoscaled protective film as a result of tandem action of the mixture components where NaNO2 facilitates establishing the conditions for the complexation process and formation of metalorganic layers with PHMG-Fe complexes. According to the hybrid QM/MM calculations [14], the PGMG-Fe2+ complexes geometry will contribute to the formation of irregular three-dimensional mesh frameworks that will determine the sub-nanoscaled structure of the phase metalorganic layers.
Conclusions
Regularities and mechanism of the protective layers formation in presence of synergistic mixtures of the corrosion inhibitors with different mechanism of action have been investigated. The isomolar series method has been employed for determination of optimal concentration ratios of the mixture components. For the NaNO2-Na2SiO3 mixture, the maximum protective efficiency of z = 99.97% is achieved at the concentration ratio as 1:2, while for NaNO2-PHMG system z = 99.8% at the concentration ratio as 2:1.
It was found that NaNO2-Na2SiO3 mixture demonstrates much improved anticorrosive behavior compared to sole sodium nitrite due to suppressing the pitting corrosion. The NaNO2-PHMG mixture ensures the formation of thin metalorganic layers with PHMG-Fe complexes and provides better protection under elevated temperature conditions.
The mechanism of joint action of the NaNO2-PHMG inhibitive mixture for protection of carbon steel in aqueous saline medium has been proposed. Sodium nitrite may indirectly facilitate to the establishing of the favorable conditions for the complexation process and engage the complexing type component of the mixture.
The inhibitive mixtures with such design where one component tuned to promote the most efficient realization of the other component protective mechanism may be distinguished to a dedicated class of tandem inhibitors.
On the basis of the proposed mechanism, the advanced surface engineering methods for obtaining nanoscaled and sub-nanostructured functional coatings may be developed.
References
Telegdi J, Szabó T, Románszki L, Pávai M (2014) The use of nano-/microlayers, self-healing and slow-release coatings to prevent corrosion and biofouling. In: Handbook of Smart Coatings for Materials Protection. Woodhead Publishing Limited, Cambridge, pp 135–182
Farmer et al. High-performance corrosion-resistant materials: iron-based amorphous-metal thermal-spray coatings, UCRL-TR-206717, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, September 28, 2004, 178 pages
Ashassi-Sorkhabi H, Es’haghi M (2014) Corrosion protection of mild steel by nano-colloidal polyaniline/nanodiamond composite coating in NaCl solution. J Coat Technol Res 11(3):371–380
Qian Y, Yo L, Jungwirth S, Seely N, Fang Y, Shi X (2015) The application of anti-corrosion coating for preserving the value of equipment asset in chloride-laden environments: a review. Int J Electrochem Sci 10:10756–10780
Nykyforchyn H, Kyryliv V, Maksymiv O, Slobodyan Z, Tsyrulnyk O (2016) Formation of surface corrosion-resistant nanocrystalline structures on steel. Nanoscale Res Lett 11:51
Vishnevska Yu.P., Brazhnyk I.V. Mechanism and kinetics of phase protective layers formation under various pH and temperature conditions // 18th International Conference Corrosion of underground structures (Košice, Slovakia, May, 23 – 24, 2013). – Košice, Slovakia, 2013. – P. 58 – 62.
Tkalenko DA, Vyshnevs’ka YP, Herasymenko YS, Khirkh-Yalan IF (2013) Changes in polarization resistance in the process of formation of protective phase layers with participation of organic ligands. Materials Science 49(3):304–310
Valiev M, Bylaska EJ, Govind N, Kowalski K, Straatsma TP, van Dam HJJ, Wang D, Nieplocha J, Apra E, Windus TL, de Jong WA (2010) NWChem: a comprehensive and scalable open-source solution for large scale molecular simulations. Comput Phys Commun 181:1477
Kim KT, Kim HW, Chang HY, Lim BT, Park HB, Kim YS (2015) Corrosion inhibiting mechanism of nitrite ion on the passivation of carbon steel and ductile cast iron for nuclear power plants. Advances in Mat Sci and Engineering. doi:10.1155/2015/408138
Ledovs’kykh VM, Levchenko SV, Tulainov SM (2013) Synergistic extrema of the mixtures of corrosion inhibitors for metals in aqueous salt solutions. Materials Science 49(6):827–832
Ledovskikh VM (1984) Synergetic inhibition of the corrosion of steel in acids. Protection of Metals 20(1):54–61
Ledovskikh VM, Kuleshova NF (1982) Inhibition of metal corrosion in neutral medium. J of Kiev Polytecnic Institute Series Chem engineering and technology 19:59–61
Ledovskykh VM, Vyshnevska YP, Poznyak SK, Brazhnyk IV, Levchenko SV (2014) Inhibition mechanism, analytical prediction and purposeful design of highly efficient mixed-type corrosion inhibitors. Spec Issue of J Physicochem Mechanics of Mat 2(10):416–420
Ledovskykh VM, Vyshnevska YP, Brazhnyk IV, Levchenko SV (2016) Design and optimisation of synergistic mixtures for corrosion protections of steel in neutral and acidic media Physicochem. Mechanics of Mat 5:30–37
Authors’ Contributions
VL developed the plan of the study for inorganic inhibitive mixtures and took part in the general analysis of the result and preparation of the article. YuV and IB developed the plan of the study for organic inhibitive mixtures, carried out the electrochemical investigation, and took part in the general analysis of the result and preparation of the article. VL carried out the corrosion rate study. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Competing Interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
About this article
Cite this article
Ledovskykh, V., Vyshnevska, Y., Brazhnyk, I. et al. Metal Surface Modification for Obtaining Nano- and Sub-Nanostructured Protective Layers. Nanoscale Res Lett 12, 186 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1186/s11671-017-1964-5
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s11671-017-1964-5