Corrosion-driven droplet wetting on iron nanolayers

The classical Evans’ drop describes a drop of aqueous salt solution, placed on a bulk metal surface where it displays a corrosion pit that grows over time producing further oxide deposits from the metal dissolution. We focus here on the corrosion-induced droplet spreading using iron nanolayers whose...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2023-10, Vol.13 (1), p.18288-18288, Article 18288
Hauptverfasser: Ricard, Aurelien, Restagno, Frederic, Jang, Yun Hee, Lansac, Yves, Raspaud, Eric
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The classical Evans’ drop describes a drop of aqueous salt solution, placed on a bulk metal surface where it displays a corrosion pit that grows over time producing further oxide deposits from the metal dissolution. We focus here on the corrosion-induced droplet spreading using iron nanolayers whose semi-transparency allowed us to monitor both iron corrosion propagation and electrolyte droplet behavior by simple optical means. We thus observed that pits grow under the droplet and merge into a corrosion front. This front reached the triple contact line and drove a non radial spreading, until it propagated outside the immobile droplet. Such chemically-active wetting is only observed in the presence of a conductive substrate that provides strong adhesion of the iron nanofilm to the substrate. By revisiting the classic Evan’s drop experiment on thick iron film, a weaker corrosion-driven droplet spreading is also identified. These results require further investigations, but they clearly open up new perspectives on substrate wetting by corrosion-like electrochemical reactions at the nanometer scale.
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-023-45547-9