In situ spatiotemporal solute imaging of metal corrosion on the example of magnesium
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In: Analytica chimica acta, Vol. 1212.2022, No. 15 June, 339910, 06.05.2022.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - In situ spatiotemporal solute imaging of metal corrosion on the example of magnesium
AU - Wagner, Stefan
AU - Hummel, Christina
AU - Santner, Jakob
AU - Puschenreiter, Markus
AU - Irrgeher, Johanna
AU - Wenzel, Walter W.
AU - Borisov, Sergey M.
AU - Prohaska, Thomas
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors
PY - 2022/5/6
Y1 - 2022/5/6
N2 - Visualization and quantification of corrosion processes is essential in materials research. Here we present a new approach for 2D spatiotemporal imaging of metal corrosion dynamics in situ. The approach combines time-integrated Mg 2+ flux imaging by diffusive gradients in thin films laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (DGT LA-ICP-MS) and near real-time pH imaging by planar optodes. The parallel assessment of Mg 2+ flux and pH distributions on a fine-structured, bare Mg alloy (b-WE43) showed intense Mg dissolution with Mg 2+ flux maxima up to 11.9 ng cm −2 s −1 and pH increase >9 during initial corrosion (≤15 min) in aqueous NaNO 3 solution (c = 0.01 mol L −1). The techniques visualized the lower initial corrosion rate in buffered synthetic body fluid (Hank's balanced salt solution; pH 7.6) compared to unbuffered NaNO 3 (pH 6.0), but precise localization of Mg corrosion remains challenging under these conditions. To further demonstrate the capability of DGT LA-ICP-MS for spatiotemporal metal flux imaging at the microscale, a coated Mg alloy (c-WE43) with lower reactivity was deployed for ≤120 min. The high spatial resolution (∼10 μm × 80 μm) and low limits of detection (≤0.04 ng cm −2 s −1, t = 60 min) enabled accurate in situ localization and quantification (U rel = 20%, k = 2) of distinct Mg 2+ flux increase, showing micro-confined release of Mg 2+ from surface coating defects on c-WE43 samples. The presented approach can be extended to other metal species and applied to other materials to better understand corrosion processes and improve material design in technological engineering.
AB - Visualization and quantification of corrosion processes is essential in materials research. Here we present a new approach for 2D spatiotemporal imaging of metal corrosion dynamics in situ. The approach combines time-integrated Mg 2+ flux imaging by diffusive gradients in thin films laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (DGT LA-ICP-MS) and near real-time pH imaging by planar optodes. The parallel assessment of Mg 2+ flux and pH distributions on a fine-structured, bare Mg alloy (b-WE43) showed intense Mg dissolution with Mg 2+ flux maxima up to 11.9 ng cm −2 s −1 and pH increase >9 during initial corrosion (≤15 min) in aqueous NaNO 3 solution (c = 0.01 mol L −1). The techniques visualized the lower initial corrosion rate in buffered synthetic body fluid (Hank's balanced salt solution; pH 7.6) compared to unbuffered NaNO 3 (pH 6.0), but precise localization of Mg corrosion remains challenging under these conditions. To further demonstrate the capability of DGT LA-ICP-MS for spatiotemporal metal flux imaging at the microscale, a coated Mg alloy (c-WE43) with lower reactivity was deployed for ≤120 min. The high spatial resolution (∼10 μm × 80 μm) and low limits of detection (≤0.04 ng cm −2 s −1, t = 60 min) enabled accurate in situ localization and quantification (U rel = 20%, k = 2) of distinct Mg 2+ flux increase, showing micro-confined release of Mg 2+ from surface coating defects on c-WE43 samples. The presented approach can be extended to other metal species and applied to other materials to better understand corrosion processes and improve material design in technological engineering.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85130080520&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.aca.2022.339910
DO - 10.1016/j.aca.2022.339910
M3 - Article
VL - 1212.2022
JO - Analytica chimica acta
JF - Analytica chimica acta
SN - 0003-2670
IS - 15 June
M1 - 339910
ER -