4.4 Article

Degradation of zinc-rich epoxy coating in 3.5% NaCl solution and evolution of its EIS parameters

Journal

JOURNAL OF COATINGS TECHNOLOGY AND RESEARCH
Volume 18, Issue 3, Pages 843-860

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11998-020-00448-8

Keywords

Zinc-rich epoxy coating; EIS parameter; Cathodic protection; Barrier property; Failure criteria

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The study found that the epoxy zinc-rich coating initially provides effective cathodic protection to the steel substrate, but still offers some protection when zinc corrosion products begin to dominate. The conductivity and activity of zinc particles lead to lower values of resistance and capacitance in the coatings, but rust spots appear on the coating surface when these values decrease to a certain level. A reference criterion for failure of about 5 x 10(4) omega cm(2) is suggested for the zinc-rich epoxy coatings, which differs from the one reported for typical organic coatings without conductive particles.
The electrochemical characteristics in the degradation process of epoxy zinc-rich coating (80 wt% zinc particles) and epoxy varnish coating in 3.5% NaCl solution were studied comparatively by using open-circuit potential and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy tests. The coating morphology, the consumption and corrosion products of zinc particles and chemical changes in the coatings were observed and analyzed with the methods of scanning electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction. The results show that the zinc-rich coating provides effective cathodic protection to the carbon steel substrate at the initial stage and still provides certain cathodic protection in the period when the barrier protection by the formation of zinc corrosion products begins to dominate. Because the zinc particles are conductive and active, the values of the coating resistance and capacitance of zinc-rich coatings are lower than those of the varnish coating. When the value of |Z|(0.01Hz) decreases to 8 x 10(4) omega cm(2), the zinc-rich coatings still provide protection to the steel substrate, but when the value decreases to about 2 x 10(4) omega cm(2), rusted spots were observed on the coating surface. Based on the results, a reference criterion of failure for the zinc-rich epoxy coatings is suggested to be about 5 x 10(4) omega cm(2) (2 x 10(4) - 8 x 10(4) omega cm(2)), which is different from the one (10(6) omega cm(2)) reported in the literature for typical organic coatings without conductive particles.

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