Uniform, Anticorrosive, and Antiabrasive Coatings on Metallic Surfaces for Cation-Metal and Cation-π Interactions.
Xing LiuShiqi ShengHaijun YangZhenglin HeYizhou YangNan ShengHaiping FangGuosheng ShiPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2020)
Metals are widely used, from daily life to modern industry. Great efforts have been made to protect the metals with various coatings. However, the well-known conventional electrochemical corrosion induced by cations and the ubiquitous nature of the coffee-ring effect make these processes very difficult. Here, a scheme by two bridges of cations and ethylenediamine (EDA) is proposed to overcome the coffee-ring effect and electrochemical corrosion and experimentally achieve uniform, anticorrosive, and antiabrasive coatings on metallic surfaces. Anticorrosive capability reaches about 26 times higher than that without cation-controlled coatings at 12 h in extremely acidic, high-temperature, and high-humidity conditions and still enhances to 2.7 times over a week. Antiabrasive capability also reaches 2.5 times. Theoretical calculations show that the suspended materials are uniformly adsorbed on the surface mediated by complexed cations through strong cation-metal and cation-π interactions. Notably, the well-known conventional electrochemical corrosion induced by cations is avoided by EDA to control cations solubility in different coating processes. These findings provide a new efficient, cost-effective, facile, and scalable method to fabricate protective coatings on metallic materials and a methodology to study metallic nanostructures in solutions, benefitting practical applications including coatings, printing, dyeing, electrochemical protection, and biosensors.
Keyphrases
- ionic liquid
- high temperature
- gold nanoparticles
- randomized controlled trial
- physical activity
- clinical trial
- health risk
- biofilm formation
- escherichia coli
- risk assessment
- molecular dynamics
- health risk assessment
- staphylococcus aureus
- quality improvement
- cystic fibrosis
- molecular dynamics simulations
- candida albicans
- study protocol
- metal organic framework
- electron transfer
- tandem mass spectrometry