Suiting up with Al-Mg-Si: New protective coating for steel in ships and marine and coastal facilities

Phys.org  January 5, 2022 Improving the corrosion resistance of steel by coating it with aluminum for marine applications is limited because of chloride ions in sea water on aluminum. Researchers in South Korea fabricated alloy films with excellent corrosion resistance by depositing an Mg film on Al-Si coated steel sheets and applying heat treatment. The fabricated Al-Mg-Si alloy film formed a corrosion product film composed of two layers, showing an excellent barrier effect against corrosion factors. The Mg in the film fabricated by heat treatment for 5 min was widely distributed in a dissolved state on the AI phase and […]

Engineers develop flexible, self-healing material to protect steel from the elements

Phys.org  October 22, 2021 An international team of researchers (USA – Rice University, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, SUNY Buffalo, George Washington University, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Canada) has designed a lightweight sulfur–selenium (S–Se) alloy with high stiffness and ductility that can serve as an excellent corrosion-resistant coating with protection efficiency of ≈99.9% for steel in a wide range of diverse environments. S–Se coated mild steel showed a corrosion rate that is 6–7 orders of magnitude lower than bare metal in abiotic (simulated seawater and sodium sulfate solution) and biotic (sulfate-reducing bacterial medium) environments. The coating is strongly adhesive, […]