4.6 Article

Contributions of Microelectrochemical Scanning Techniques for the Efficient Detection of Localized Corrosion Processes at the Cut Edges of Polymer-Coated Galvanized Steel

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 27, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27072167

Keywords

localised corrosion; coatings; cut edge; galvanized steel; scanning vibrating electrode technique; scanning electrochemical microscopy; micro-potentiometry; ion-selective microelectrodes; galvanic couple

Funding

  1. ERASMUS+ program
  2. Canary Agency for Research, Innovation and Information Society (Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain)
  3. European Social Fund (Brussels, Belgium)
  4. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO, Madrid, Spain)
  5. European Regional Development Fund (Brussels, Belgium) [CTQ2016-80522-P]
  6. International Visegrad Fund (Bratislava, Slovakia) [22020140]
  7. Hungarian Research Grant NFKI (Budapest, Hungary) [125244]

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Microelectrochemical scanning techniques, such as SVET and SECM, can provide spatially resolved information on corrosion reactions. SVET allows the temporal evolution of corrosion reactions to be followed, but lacks chemical specificity. ISME probes can effectively monitor anodic sites and can be integrated with pH measurements.
Spatially resolved information on corrosion reactions operating at the cut edges of coated metals can be obtained using microelectrochemical scanning techniques using a suitable selection of operation modes and scanning probes. The scanning vibrating electrode technique (SVET) provides current density maps with a spatial resolution of the order of the dimensions of the sample, which allows the temporal evolution of the corrosion reactions to be followed over time. This leads to the identification and localization of cathodic and anodic sites, although the technique lacks chemical specificity for the unequivocal identification of the reactive species. The application of scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM) was previously limited to image cathodic reaction sites, either due to oxygen consumption in the amperometric operation or by the alkalinisation of the electrolyte in potentiometric operation. However, it is shown that anodic sites can be effectively monitored using an ion-selective microelectrode (ISME) as a probe. The ISME probes detected differences in the local concentrations of Zn2+ and OH- ions from the cut edges of a complete coil coating system compared to the same system after the polymeric layers were removed. In this way, it has been shown that the inhibitor loading in the polymer layers effectively contributes to reducing the corrosion rates at the cut edge, thus helping to extend the useful life of the sacrificial galvanized layer bonded directly to the steel matrix. Additionally, these two probe configurations can be integrated into a multi-electrode tip for potentiometric operation to simultaneously monitor localized changes in pH values and metal ion dissolution in a single scan. Spatial and temporal distributions were further investigated using different rastering procedures, and the potential of constructing pseudomaps for 2D-imaging is described.

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