Applied Surface Science, Vol.253, No.11, 5011-5016, 2007
Corrosive behavior of chromium carbide-based films formed on steel using a filtered cathodic vacuum arc system
The formation of chromium carbide-based hard-coatings on steels using a 90 degrees-bend filtered cathodic vacuum arc (FCVA) has extensive industrial applications; such coatings are free of macroparticles and exhibit excellent characteristics. In this investigation, a working pressure of C2H2/Ar was adopted to synthesize amorphous chromium carbide film (a-C:Cr) and crystalline chromium carbide film (cryst-Cr3C2) from a Cr target (99.95%) at 500 degrees C under a substrate voltage of -50 V. The corrosion behavior of a-C:Cr coated on steel (a-C:Cr/steel) and cryst-Cr3C2 coated on steel (cryst-Cr3C2/steel) were compared in terms of open-circuit potentials (OCP) and polarization resistance (R-p) in an aerated 3.5 wt% NaCl aqueous solution, as determined by electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS). The XRD results indicated that the transformation of aC:Cr to cryst-Cr3C2 is distinct as the working pressure declines from 1.2 x 10(-2) to 2.9 x 10(-3) Torr. The OCP of a-C:Cr/steel and cryst-Cr3C2/Steel resemble each other and both assembly are nobler than uncoated steel. The R. of the coatings exceeds that of the uncoated steel. The SEM observation and the EIS results demonstrate that the cryst-Cr3C2/Steel more effectively isolates the defects than dose a-C:Cr/steel. 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords:filtered cathodic vacuum arc;chromium carbide;electrochemical impedance spectroscopy;corrosion