화학공학소재연구정보센터
Materials Chemistry and Physics, Vol.137, No.1, 331-339, 2012
Chemistry of the interaction between azole type corrosion inhibitor molecules and metal surfaces
By means of density functional theory calculations, it has been shown how typical organic corrosion inhibitors-molecules that have the ability to remarkably slow down the corrosion of metals and alloys-interact with bare surfaces of various types of metals. As representative model systems, benzimidazole and benzotriazole inhibitors on iron, copper, and aluminum surfaces are considered. It is found that bonding depends sensitively on the type of metal. On transition metals with open d-band the inhibitor molecules can chemisorb strongly either parallel to the surface with a pronounced pi-d hybridization or perpendicularly with unsaturated N atom(s) through sigma-molecular orbitals, whereas on transition metals with fully occupied d-band and on sp-metals the molecules weakly chemisorb only with the latter mode. In addition to neutral inhibitor molecules also inhibitors in deprotonated (anionic) and protonated (cationic) forms are considered, because many corrosion inhibitors possess acidic hydrogens as well as basic heteroatoms. It is shown that the chemisorptive bonding is far the strongest for deprotonated inhibitors and, moreover, that even protonated inhibitors may chemisorb, although such bonding is characteristic of more reactive metals. However adsorbed protonated inhibitors are likely to deprotonate on all considered metals, whereas further deprotonation from neutral to deprotonated form is more likely on more reactive metals. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.