Assessing corrosion resistance of two-dimensional nanomaterial-based coatings on stainless steel substrates.
Shakir Bin MujibSantanu MukherjeeZhongkan RenGurpreet SinghPublished in: Royal Society open science (2020)
Two-dimensional (2D) materials have elicited considerable interest in the past decade due to a diverse array of novel properties ranging from high surface to mass ratios, a wide range of band gaps (insulating boron nitride (BN) to semiconducting transition metal dichalcogenides), high mechanical strength and chemical stability. Given the superior chemo-thermo-mechanical properties, 2D materials may provide transformative solution to a familiar yet persistent problem of significant socio-economic burden: the corrosion of stainless steel (SS). With this broader perspective, we investigate corrosion resistance properties of SS-coated with 2D nanomaterials; molybdenum disulfide (MoS2), BN, bulk graphite in 3.5 wt% aqueous NaCl solution. The nanosheets were prepared by a novel liquid phase exfoliation technique and the coatings were made by a paint brush to achieve uniformity. Open circuit potential (OCP) and potentiodynamic plots indicate the best corrosion resistance is provided by the MoS2 coatings. Superior performance of the coating is attributed to low electronic conductivity, large flake size and uniform coverage of SS substrate, which probably impeded the corrosive ions from the solution from diffusing through the coating.