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Evaluation of the corrosion resistance of electroless Ni-P and Ni-P composite coatings by electrochemical impedance spectroscopy

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TLDR
In this paper, the same fundamental reaction is occurring on all the coatings of the present study but over a different effective area in each case, which can be attributed to the decrease in the effective metallic area prone to corrosion.
Abstract
Electroless Ni-P composite coatings have gained a good deal of popularity and acceptance in recent years as they provide considerable improvement of desirable qualities such as hardness, wear, abrasion resistance, etc. The disagreement among researchers on the corrosion behaviour of these coatings warrants a thorough investigation. Among the various techniques available for the determination of corrosion resistance, electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) is considered to be superior as it provides not only an assessment of the corrosion resistance of different deposits but also enables the mechanistic pathway by which the deposits become corroded to be determined. The present investigation focuses on the evaluation of the corrosion resistance of electroless Ni-P and Ni-P-Si3N4, Ni-P-CeO2 and Ni-P-TiO2 composite coatings produced using an acidic hypophosphite-reduced electroless nickel bath, using EIS. The study makes evident that the same fundamental reaction is occurring on all the coatings of the present study but over a different effective area in each case. The charge transfer resistance of electroless Ni-P and Ni-P composite deposits are in the range 32,253–90,700 Ω cm2, whereas the capacitances of these coatings are in the range 11–17 µF/cm2. The improved corrosion resistance obtained for electroless Ni-P and Ni-P composite coatings is due to the enrichment of phosphorus on the electrode surface, which enables the preferential hydrolysis of phosphorus over that of nickel. The better corrosion resistance obtained for electroless Ni-P composite coatings can be ascribed to the decrease in the effective metallic area prone to corrosion. Among the three electroless Ni-P composite coatings, the corrosion resistance is in the following order: Ni-P-CeO2=Ni-P-Si3N4>Ni-P-TiO2.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Vacancy mediated improvement in electrocatalytic HER on Nano-CeO2-Al2O3 incorporated Ni-P electrode

TL;DR: In this paper, the cathodic activity of Ni-P electrode for alkaline water electrolysis was enhanced by incorporation of CeO2-Al2O3 (Ce/Al) composite.
Journal ArticleDOI

Investigation on microhardness and corrosion resistance of ZnO reinforced Ni-P composite coatings at various annealing temperatures

TL;DR: In the process of electroless coatings, mild steel was used as a substrate for the Ni-P-ZnO composite coatings as mentioned in this paper, and the annealing temperature effect on microhardness and resistance was investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fabrication and Corrosion Behavior of Electroless Ni-W-P Coating on Magnesium Alloy

TL;DR: In this paper, a ternary Ni-W-P coating was synthesized from a sulfate nickel bath, and the planting rate was about 10µm/h.
Journal ArticleDOI

A study of the corrosion of stainless steel 304L coated with a 190 nm-thick manganese layer and annealed with nitrogen flux in a 0.4-mole solution of H 2 SO 4 at different temperatures

TL;DR: In this paper, a method for enhancing the resistance against corrosion of stainless steel 304L coated with 190nm-thick manganese film and annealed with nitrogen flux at constant temperature (723 K) is reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of heat treatment on the temperature dependent wear characteristics of electroless Ni–P–BN(h) composite coatings

TL;DR: In this paper, Ni3P composite coatings embedded with boron nitride (BN(h)) particles were deposited on AISI 1018 steel using electroless deposition technique.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The anodic behavior of amorphous Ni-19P alloys in different amorphous states

TL;DR: In this article, an amorphous Ni-19P alloy prepared by rapid quenching of white heat melt showed a higher anodic dissolution current density in 1 N HCl in comparison with the same amorphized alloy prepared with red heat melt, showing that the difference in anodic behavior between these two as-quenched specimens seems due to the differences in the amounts of quenched-in defects.
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