Hydrophobic phytic acid conversion layers for corrosion protection of steel surfaces

While phytic acid conversion coatings have shown success on diverse surfaces and the development of enhanced corrosion protection coatings, the latest results reveal their inability to improve corrosion protection properties when combined with organic coatings.

Innovative hydrophobic phytic acid conversion layers enhance corrosion protection on steel surfaces.
Innovative hydrophobic phytic acid conversion layers enhance corrosion protection on steel surfaces.

The possibility for a good conversion protection based on phytic acid (PA) solutions is described many times in the literature. The latest results show that PA cannot improve the corrosion protective properties with an organic coating, although PA conversion layers without organic coatings have already successfully been applied on different surfaces and the development of layers with enhanced corrosion protective behavior was possible.

The reason why PA does not work together with an organic coating is based on the hydrophilic surface and therefore the low contact angle of the PA conversion layer. One solution is to modify PA directly and/or change the solution properties to increase the hydrophobic properties.

Sustainable organic PA-based conversion layers on steel

In the study an innovative way to synthesize a new type of sustainable organic PA-based conversion layers on steel, which works completely without titanium or zirconium and is a new approach for hydrophobic conversion layers, is presented. The results prove the formation of a pure PA-based conversion layer on the surface. The infrared (IR), Raman, and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy verified the new synthesis products and by means of the vibration spectroscopy, the resulting conversion layers. To analyze the new physical properties, the contact angle of the conversion layers was detected.

By means of the electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS), the electrochemical stability of the conversion was studied and with cyclic voltammetry (CV), the solidity ratio was investigated. At last, the corrosion protective performance of the layers in combination with an E-coat in the salt spray test (SST) was examined. All modified PA-based conversion layers in combination with E-coats increased the corrosion protective properties in relation to industrial used phosphate conversion layers of steel surfaces.

The study has been published in Journal of Coatings Technology and Research, Volume 21, Issue 1 , 03 January 2024.

Reading tip 

The EC Tech Report Waterborne Protective Coatings gives you an extensive up-to-date bundle on protective coatings, focusing on water-borne solutions, with articles, videos and other content handpicked by the European Coatings Team. In addition to cutting-edge technical articles, the Tech Report is rounded off with valuable market insights and key fundamentals on water-borne protective coatings. 

Hersteller zu diesem Thema

This could also be interesting for you!