ABSTRACT
Zinc–Nickel monolayer (single layer) and compositionally modulated multilayer alloy coatings were developed on to mild steel from acidic sulphate bath; and their corrosion performance were studied using potentiodynamic polarization and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy methods. The coating layers were formed galvanostatically by single bath technique, using square current pulses and triangular current pulses. For the best efficiency of the deposits against corrosion, the switched cathode current density and the number of layers were optimized. Under optimized conditions, Zn–Ni multilayer alloy coatings were produced at the current density 3.0/5.0 A dm−2 having 300 layers were ∼65 (square) and ∼48 (triangular) times more corrosion resistant respectively than the single layer alloy coating of the same thickness. Scanning electron microscopy has been employed to investigate, the formation of multilayer alloy coatings as well as the morphology of the surface before and after corrosion studies.
Acknowledgement
I thankful to the Principal, NMAM Institute of Technology, Nitte for providing the instrumental facilities.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).