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Molten carbonate corrosion of a 13-Cr ferritic stainless steel protected by a perovskite conversion treatment: Relationship with the coating microstructure and formation mechanism

TitleMolten carbonate corrosion of a 13-Cr ferritic stainless steel protected by a perovskite conversion treatment: Relationship with the coating microstructure and formation mechanism
Publication TypeArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Year of Publication2012
AuthorsFrangini, S., Zaza F., and Masci A.
JournalCorrosion Science
Volume62
Pagination136-146
ISSN0010938X
Keywordsalkalinity, Barrier properties, Basic conditions, Chromate coatings, Chromium, Coating microstructures, Coating porosity, Conversion coatings, Conversion treatment, Corrosion attack, Corrosion protection, Corrosion resistance, Corrosion-resistant, Dissolution, Feasibility studies, Ferritic stainless steel, Ferritic steel, Formation mechanism, Fused salts, High temperature corrosions, Hot corrosion, Iron oxides, Microstructure, Molten carbonate corrosion, Molten carbonate fuel cells (MCFC), Molten salt, Oxide coating, Perovskite, Perovskite coatings, Rare earth elements, Reaction mechanism, Salt bath, Substrate corrosion, Synthesis (chemical)
Abstract

A feasibility study has been conducted to determine if a recently developed molten salt perovskite conversion coating process can be applied to protect an intrinsically low corrosion-resistant 13-Cr ferritic stainless steel in Molten Carbonate Fuel Cell (MCFC) demanding environments. The molten salt bath composition has been adapted to evaluate the influence of two different reaction mechanisms, namely dissolution-precipitation and precursor-template synthesis, on microstructure and MCFC corrosion resistance of the LaFeO 3-based perovskite coatings. It has been found that the necessary strong basic/oxidizing chemistry conditions for the dissolution-precipitation mechanism to occur cause extensive substrate corrosion that contribute to coating porosity and poor MCFC corrosion protection. On the other hand, excellent corrosion protection of the 13-Cr steel is afforded by a perovskite conversion coating that had been produced via an iron oxide precursor-template route under milder basic conditions. The results show that a decreased salt bath basicity fully suppresses substrate corrosion, while promoting at the same a fine coating microstructure and virtual absence of coating through-porosity, thus markedly improving the barrier properties of coated 13-Cr steel against MCFC corrosion attack. © 2012 Elsevier Ltd.

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84862890100&doi=10.1016%2fj.corsci.2012.05.011&partnerID=40&md5=70316fa443f5cd57aabf2eb22915e8b3
DOI10.1016/j.corsci.2012.05.011
Citation KeyFrangini2012136