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Improving the corrosion behaviour of Zn-Ni alloy coatings on 316 SS from chloride-sulfate bath by addition of triethanolamine or sucrose

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Corrosion of Zn-Ni alloy coatings on stainless steel 316 SS in a chloride-sulfate bath with the addition of either triethanolamine or sucrose was examined. A constant cathode potential was used to deposit zinc-nickel alloys, while cyclic voltammetry and potentiodynamic polarization were used to measure corrosion. In addition, scanning electron microscopy was utilized to analyse Zn-Ni alloy coating surface layers formed without and with additives. The outcomes discovered that the corrosion resistance of Zn-Ni alloy coatings in 3.5 % NaCl solution was highly influenced by adding triethanolamine or sucrose. Decreasing the Zn:Ni molar ratio led to an increase in corrosion resistance. All Zn-Ni alloy coatings were superior to pure Zn coating in their corrosion behaviour. The best result was found for potentiostatic electrodeposition of Zn-Ni alloy at the cathodic potential of -1.3 V vs. Ag/AgCl for 20 minutes in the presence of 0.335 M triethanolamine from a solution a low corrosion rate of 0.00795 mm year-1 was observed at Ecorr = -0.5 V vs. Ag/AgCl and icorr= 0.535 mu A cm-2. Scanning electron microscopy confirmed that this alloy has a granular structure with no cracks and a less porous structure. The new Zn-Ni alloy is superior in its properties in terms of corrosion resistance compared with those obtained in previous

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