4.4 Article

Significance of p-Electrons in the Design of Corrosion Inhibitors for Carbon Steel in Simulated Concrete Pore Solution

Journal

CORROSION
Volume 77, Issue 9, Pages 976-990

Publisher

NATL ASSOC CORROSION ENG
DOI: 10.5006/3844

Keywords

adsorption; organic inhibitors; pi-electrons; pitting corrosion; quantitative structure-property relationships; signatures

Funding

  1. University of Akron [FRC-207367, FRC-207160]
  2. Firestone Research Grant [639430]

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The study shows that organic compounds with pi-electrons have better performance in inhibiting the corrosion of carbon steel reinforcements, with the pi-bond electrons playing a crucial role in the adsorption process.
Chloride-induced corrosion of carbon steel reinforcements is one of the most important failure mechanisms of reinforced concrete structures. Organic corrosion inhibitors containing different functional groups were analyzed using cyclic potentiodynamic polarization to determine their effect on the pitting potential of carbon steel reinforcements in a 0.1 M Cl- contaminated, simulated, concrete pore solution. It was found that organic compounds with pi-electrons in a functional group had better performance. This is attributed to the high density of highest occupied molecular orbital energies found in carboxyl group pi-bond. Accordingly, this increases the tendency of donating pi-electrons to the appropriate vacant d-orbital of the carbon steel, forming an adsorption film. The best corrosion inhibition performance was achieved by poly-carboxylates followed by alkanolamines and amines. In addition, a novel approach to show the significance of corrosion inhibition phenomenon was applied by developing a quantitative structure-property relationship using the Signature molecular descriptor which correlates the occurrences of atomic Signatures in a data set to a property of interest using a forward stepping multilinear regression. The atomic Signature fragment capturing pi-bond was the most influential of all of the fragments, which underscores the significance of pi-bond electrons in the adsorption process. It was demonstrated that the [O](=[C]) atomic Signature plays a crucial role in the inhibition process at all heights, corroborating the experimental results.

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