4.8 Article

Corrosion of One-Step Superhydrophobic Stainless-Steel Thermal Spray Coatings

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages 1523-1532

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.9b17836

Keywords

high-velocity oxygen fuel; thermal spray; coatings; stainless steel; superhydrophobicity; surface chemistry; corrosion

Funding

  1. NSERC [CRD 242399]
  2. NSERC-CGS
  3. NSERC CGS-MSFSS
  4. NSERC green-SEAM Strategic network
  5. Mitacs Globalink program
  6. Hydro-Quebec

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As most superhydrophobic coatings are made of soft materials, the need for harder, more robust films is evident in applications where erosional degradation is of concern. The work herein describes a methodology to produce superhydrophobic stainless-steel thermal spray coatings using the high-velocity oxygen fuel technique. Due to the use of a kerosene fuel source, a carbon-rich film is formed on the surface of the thermal spray coatings, lowering the surface energy of the high-energy metallic substrates. The thermal spray process generates a hierarchical micro-/sub-microstructure that is needed to sustain superhydrophobicity. The effect of spray parameters such as particle velocity and temperature on the coating's hydrophobicity state was explored, and a high particle velocity was shown to cause superhydrophobic characteristics. The coatings were characterized using scanning electron microscopy, profilometry, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, static water contact angle measurements, water droplet roll-off measurements, and water droplet bouncing tests. The corrosion behavior of the coatings was studied using potentiodynamic polarization measurements in order to correlate water repellency with corrosion resistance; however, all coatings demonstrated active corrosion without passivation. This study describes an interesting phenomenon where superhydrophobicity does not guarantee corrosion resistance and discusses alternative applications for such materials.

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