Fabrication, Characterization, and Corrosion Protection of Hot Dip Aluminized Coatings for Steel Using Discarded Soda Cans
Authors/Creators
- 1. MIMAROPA Regional Science High School
Description
Corrosion which seriously affects the quality and functionality of steel can be reduced by hot dip aluminizing which involves dipping substrate to a molten aluminum bath. Thus, this study aimed to produce hot dip aluminized coating for steel using discarded soda cans. A total of 80 steel nails with length of 65.62±0.56 mm were used wherein 40 nails were intended for the hot dip aluminizing process at 650-700 °C with an average coating mass and thickness of 547 g/m2 and 170 μm, respectively, with density of 2.627 g/cm3 following ASTM standards. Compared to the non-coated setups, the fabricated aluminum coating reduced 0.178g and 0.092g of corrosion products accumulation after immersions on H2O2 and NaCl solutions for 7 days and 4 weeks, respectively. Optical analysis of surface and cross sections of the coated samples showed less pitting, and corrosion products. Aluminum coating tends to pit that starts from small cracks and fractures when immersed in corrosive medium. Moreover, scanning electron microscopy showed that the coated nail sample experienced minimal corrosion in the form of thin cracks compared to non-coated nails which had relatively rough surface as result of heavy corrosion. In addition, t-test showed significant difference between the accumulated corrosion products’ weights of coated and non-coated setups after immersing in NaCl (t = -13.801; p = 0.000) and H2O2 (t = -31.005; p = 0.000) wherein less corrosion product was obtained by the coated set-up (x̅ = 0.036 (H2O2) and x̅ = 0.028 (NaCl)). Thus, the results proved that the produced aluminized coating from waste soda cans provides a significant corrosion protection on the steel substrates.
Files
WSN-108-2018-158-179.pdf
Files
(1.7 MB)
| Name | Size | Download all |
|---|---|---|
|
md5:e11e68617d6947b0f7c017c50789601b
|
1.7 MB | Preview Download |
Additional details
Related works
References
- Awan, G.H., Ahmed, F., Ali, L., Shuja, M.S., & Hasan, F. (2008). Effects of Coating- thickness on the Formability of Hot Dip Aluminized Steel. Pakistan Journal of Engineering and Applied Sciences, 2, 14-21.
- Bahadur, A., & Mohanty, O.N. (1991). Structural Studies of Hot Dip Aluminized Coatings on Mild Steel. Materials Transactions, 32(11), 1053-1061.
- Yue, G., Lu, X., Zhu, Y., Zhang, X., and Zhang, S. (2009). Surface morphology, crystal structure and orientation of aluminum coatings electrodeposited on mild steel in ionic liquid. Chemical Engineering Journal, 17, 79-86.
- Oguzie, E.E., Li, Y., & Wang, F. H. (2007). Effect of surface nanocrystallization on corrosion and corrosion inhibition of low carbon steel: Synergistic effect of methionine and iodide ion. Electrochimica Acta, 52(24), 6988-6996.
- Meng, J., Dong, X.,, Zhou, H., Liu, W., and Yin, Z. (2017). Investigation of adhesive resistance of aluminum alloy by sandblasting and electrochemical Machining. Micromachines, 8(91).
- Maulidin, A., and Kimapong, K. (2015). Effect of sodium chloride on weight loss of AA1100 aluminum alloy and SGACD zinc coated steel lap joint. International Journal of Advanced Culture and Technology, 3(1), 39-45.
- Lee, H.S., Singh, J.K., Ismail, M., and Bhattacharya, C. (2016). Corrosion resistance properties by arc thermal metal spray in SAE J2334 solution with exposure periods. Metals, 6(55).
- Jafarzadeh, K., Shahrabi, S.M.M., Hadavi, M.G., & Hosseini, M.G. (2009). Morphological characterization of AA5083-H321 aluminum alloy corrosion in NaCl solution under hydrodynamic conditions. Anti-Corrosion Methods and Materials, 56(1). 35–42.
- Hajar, H. M., Zulkifli, F., Mohd Sabri, M. G., & Wan Nik, W.B. (2016). Protection against Corrosion of Aluminum Alloy in Marine Environment by Lawsonia inermis. International Journal of Corrosion Volume 2016, Article ID 4891803, 5 pages. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/4891803