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Role of surface hydroxylation on adhesion at zinc/silica interfaces

The weak interaction between zinc and silica is responsible for a poor performance of anti-corrosive galvanic zinc coatings on modern advanced high strength steels which are fundamental in the automotive industry, and important for rail transport, shipbuilding, or aerospace. With the goal of identif...

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Published in:Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP 2018, Vol.20 (22), p.15581-15588
Main Authors: Le, Ha-Linh Thi, Goniakowski, Jacek, Noguera, Claudine, Koltsov, Alexey, Mataigne, Jean-Michel
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creator Le, Ha-Linh Thi
Goniakowski, Jacek
Noguera, Claudine
Koltsov, Alexey
Mataigne, Jean-Michel
description The weak interaction between zinc and silica is responsible for a poor performance of anti-corrosive galvanic zinc coatings on modern advanced high strength steels which are fundamental in the automotive industry, and important for rail transport, shipbuilding, or aerospace. With the goal of identifying possible levers for its improvement, we report an ab initio study of the effect of surface hydroxylation on the adhesion characteristics of model zinc/β-cristobalite interfaces, representative for various surface hydroxylation/hydrogenation conditions. We show that surface silanols resulting from dissociative water adsorption at the most stable stoichiometric (001) and (111) surfaces prevent strong zinc-silica interaction. However, dehydrogenation of such interfaces produces oxygen-rich zinc/silica contacts with excellent adhesion characteristics. They are due to a partial zinc oxidation and the formation of strong iono-covalent Zn-O bonds between zinc atoms and the under-coordinated excess anions, remnant of the hydroxylation layer. Interestingly, these interfaces appear as the most thermodynamically stable in a wide range of realistic oxygen-rich and hydrogen-lean environments. We also point out that the partial oxidation of zinc atoms in direct contact with the oxide substrate may somewhat weaken the cohesion in the zinc deposit itself. This fundamental analysis of the microscopic mechanisms responsible for the improved zinc wetting on pre-hydroxylated silica substrates furnishes useful guidelines towards practical attempts to improve adhesion.
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title Role of surface hydroxylation on adhesion at zinc/silica interfaces
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