Corrosion stability of electrodeposited cyclic multilayer Zn-Ni alloy coatings

dc.contributor.authorBhat, R.S.
dc.contributor.authorUdupa, K.R.
dc.contributor.authorHegde, A.C.
dc.date.accessioned2026-02-05T09:35:45Z
dc.date.issued2011
dc.description.abstractThis paper reports on a study of electrodeposition and characterisation of cyclic multilayer coatings of Zn-Ni alloy from a sulphate bath. Cyclic multilayer alloy coatings were deposited on mild steel through the single bath technique by appropriate manipulation of cathode current densities. The thickness and composition of the individual layers of the CMA deposits were altered precisely and conveniently by cyclic modulation of the cathode current during electrodeposition. Multilayer deposits with sharp change in composition were developed using square current pulses, using thiamine hydrochloride and citric acid as additives. Laminar deposits with different configurations were produced and their corrosion behaviours were studied by AC and DC methods in 5%NaCl solution. It was observed that the corrosion resistance of the CMA coating increased progressively with the number of layers (up to certain optimal numbers) and then decreased. The decrease in corrosion resistance at high degree of layering was attributed to interlayer diffusion due to less relaxation time for redistribution of metal ions at cathode during deposition. The coating configurations have been optimised for peak performance of the coatings against corrosion. It was found that CMA coating developed at cyclic cathode current densities of 3.0/5.0 A dm-2 with 300 layers showed the lowest corrosion rate (0.112×10-2 mm/year) which is ?54 times better than that of monolithic Zn-Ni alloy, deposited from the same bath. The protection efficacy of CMA coatings is attributed to the difference in phase structure of the alloys in successive layers, deposited at different current densities, evidenced by X-ray diffraction analysis. The formation of multilayers and corrosion mechanism were examined by scanning electron microscopy. © 2011 Institute of Metal Finishing.
dc.identifier.citationTransactions of the Institute of Metal Finishing, 2011, 89, 5, pp. 268-274
dc.identifier.issn202967
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1179/174591911X13119319657439
dc.identifier.urihttps://idr.nitk.ac.in/handle/123456789/27194
dc.subjectAlloy coatings
dc.subjectCathode current density
dc.subjectCathode currents
dc.subjectCorrosion behaviour
dc.subjectCorrosion mechanisms
dc.subjectCorrosion stability
dc.subjectCurrent pulse
dc.subjectDC methods
dc.subjectInterlayer diffusion
dc.subjectMulti-layer-coating
dc.subjectNaCl solution
dc.subjectNumber of layers
dc.subjectOptimal number
dc.subjectPeak performance
dc.subjectSingle bath
dc.subjectSulphate bath
dc.subjectThiamine hydrochloride
dc.subjectXRD
dc.subjectZn-Ni alloy
dc.subjectZn-Ni coatings
dc.subjectAlloys
dc.subjectCarbon steel
dc.subjectCathodes
dc.subjectCerium alloys
dc.subjectCitric acid
dc.subjectCorrosion rate
dc.subjectCorrosion resistance
dc.subjectCurrent density
dc.subjectDeposits
dc.subjectElectrodeposition
dc.subjectMagnetrons
dc.subjectMetal ions
dc.subjectProtective coatings
dc.subjectScanning electron microscopy
dc.subjectSodium chloride
dc.subjectX ray diffraction analysis
dc.subjectZinc
dc.subjectZinc alloys
dc.subjectMultilayers
dc.titleCorrosion stability of electrodeposited cyclic multilayer Zn-Ni alloy coatings

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