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Effect of Some New Organic Polymers As Green Corrosion Inhibitors for Metals in Different Media

Wednesday, May 14, 2014
Grand Foyer, Lobby Level (Hilton Orlando Bonnet Creek)
F. Branzoi (Institute of Physical Chemistry), V. Branzoi (University Politehnica of Bucharest), and A. Stanca (Energy Research and Modernizing Institute)
Pure metals and alloys react chemically/electrochemically with corrosive medium to form a stable compound, in which the loss of metal occurs. The compound so formed is called corrosion product and metal surface becomes corroded. Among the several methods of corrosion control and prevention, the use of organic corrosion inhibitors is very well known.

Using the microwaves energy new organic polymers were synthesized by radicalic polymerization. These new organic compounds have anticorrosive and antiscale properties and for this reason, were used for cooling water systems protection. The inhibition activity analysis of these new organic polymers was made by assuming that the mechanism of inhibition by organic molecules is chemisorptions and that the energetic of the corrosion process per se is unaffected by the addition of substituents on the parent compound. We presume that, these new organic polymers inhibit corrosion of carbon steel by a protective mechanism, forming insoluble iron complexes and repairing the porous oxide layers. The methods employed were potentiodynamic polarization, electrochemical impedance spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and metallurgical microscopy techniques. The addition of the organic inhibitors led in all the cases to inhibition of the corrosion process. The inhibition efficiency was high in all the studied cases. The corrosion parameters obtained from polarization curves and from EIS spectra are in good concordance and point out the inhibitory action of these new organic polymers. The adsorptions of the organic compounds on the carbon steels surface obeyed Langmuirs isotherm. Further characterization using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) demonstrates the adsorption of organic inhibitors and the formation of corrosion products on the carbon steels and the brass surface.

The inhibition process was attributed to the formation of the adsorbed film on the metal surface that protects the metal against corrosive agents. The EIS measurements have confirmed this protection and pointed out the formation of adsorption layers on the electrode surface.