Thiophene derivatives as corrosion inhibitors for 2024-T3 aluminum alloy in hydrochloric acid medium.
N ArrousseY FernineNabil Al-ZaqriAhmed BoshaalaE Ech-ChihbiR SalimF El HajjajiAnouar AlamiM Ebn TouhamiM TalebPublished in: RSC advances (2022)
Thiophene derivatives, namely ( E )-thiophene-2-carbaldehyde oxime (OXM) and ( E )-5-(thiophen-2-yl)-1 H -tetrazole (TET), were synthesized and characterized via 1 H and 13 C NMR. Furthermore, their inhibitory property for AA2024-T3 in 1 M HCl solution was investigated via electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and potentiodynamic polarization at 293 K, together with DFT/B3LYP-based calculations. Numerous global and local descriptors of reactivity such as EHOMO, ELUMO, energy gap, electronegativity ( χ ), hardness ( η ), and frontier molecular orbital repartitions were investigated to describe the reactivity of each molecule. Alternatively, Monte Carlo simulations were performed under the solvation condition on the Al (111) surface to understand the adsorption behavior of the as-studied inhibitors deeply. The inhibition efficiency increased with an increase in the inhibitor concentration, achieving maximum values of 94.0% and 96% at 10 -3 M, respectively. The polarization curves showed that the examined compounds act as mixed-type inhibitors. In addition, the adsorption of these compounds obeyed the Al Awady, Flory-Huggins and Temkin isotherms. The surface characterization analysis via SEM/EDX confirmed the presence of a barrier layer covering the aluminum surface. The experimental inhibition efficiencies were correlated with global descriptors, which confirmed that this theoretical study is useful for the protection of aluminum alloy metal in an acidic medium.
Keyphrases
- monte carlo
- molecular dynamics
- solid state
- ionic liquid
- high resolution
- density functional theory
- molecular dynamics simulations
- oxide nanoparticles
- magnetic resonance
- single molecule
- atomic force microscopy
- gold nanoparticles
- aqueous solution
- molecular docking
- computed tomography
- contrast enhanced
- electron transfer