Corrosion Mechanism of Zn-Ni Alloy Electrodeposited Coatings

831817

12/05/1983

Event
SAE Automotive Corrosion and Prevention Conference and Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
Electrodeposited Zn-Ni alloy coatings show a maximum resistance to salt spray corrosion at 12% to 15% Ni. To gain an increased understanding of this behavior, we studied the corrosion mechanisms of 13% Ni coatings in sodium chloride solutions with electrochemical, microscopic, x-ray, and Auger electron spectroscopic methods. We observed that the Zn-Ni alloy initially corrodes with the preferential dissolution of zinc. As the coating dezincifies, tensile stresses are created in the coating causing development of a fine network of cracks. As corrosion progresses, the coating transforms into a composite barrier layer consisting of a micro cracked nickel-rich metallic phase and zinc corrosion products. This behavior contrasts with that of pure zinc coatings which corrode by a simple mechanism of uniform dissolution. The superiority of Zn-Ni alloy coatings in salt spray corrosion appears to result from slower anodic dissolution kinetics and some barrier protection afforded by the remaining composite layer.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/831817
Pages
8
Citation
Lambert, M., Hart, R., and Townsend, H., "Corrosion Mechanism of Zn-Ni Alloy Electrodeposited Coatings," SAE Technical Paper 831817, 1983, https://doi.org/10.4271/831817.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Dec 5, 1983
Product Code
831817
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English