Use of ionic liquids in SECM experiments to distinguish effects of temperature and water in organic coating swelling

•The effect of temperature onto the organic coating swelling can be evaluated thanks to SECM experiments in RTIL.•However, this contribution is low when compared to the global organic coating swelling.•Obtained during hygrothermal ageings so water uptake appears then has the major effect to the glob...

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Veröffentlicht in:Progress in organic coatings 2020-02, Vol.139, p.105438, Article 105438
Hauptverfasser: Trinh, D., Vosgien-Lacombre, C., Bouvet, G., Mallarino, S., Touzain, S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•The effect of temperature onto the organic coating swelling can be evaluated thanks to SECM experiments in RTIL.•However, this contribution is low when compared to the global organic coating swelling.•Obtained during hygrothermal ageings so water uptake appears then has the major effect to the global organic coating.•The global organic coating swelling is however higher than the sum of water effect and temperature effect.•The excess swelling was attributed to a relaxation of internal stresses. During hygrothermal ageing of organic coatings, water and temperature lead to a coating swelling which can be in situ monitored by scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM). However, it is difficult to separate the respective influence of water and temperature when ageing is performed in aqueous solution. In order to overcome this problem, room temperature ionic liquids can be a solution. In this work, a model DGEBA/DAMP polyepoxide resin, with or without pigments (TiO2) was applied onto steel Q-panels, with a thickness about 100 μm, completely cross-linked, and was aged in a 3 wt.% NaCl aqueous solution. The swelling was measured by SECM for different ageing temperatures in the saline solution. The same epoxy systems were placed in RTIL (1-Ethyl-3-methylimidiazolium ethyl sulfate) and the swelling was measured by SECM at different temperatures. A typical procedure was applied in order to analyze SECM results obtained in RTIL. The results allowed to evaluate the respective contribution of water uptake and temperature to the global coating swelling. The swelling due to temperature was 0.5%/10 °C for unpigmented coatings and 0.3%/10 °C for pigmented coatings while the total swelling was respectively about 5% and 4%, which is higher than the water uptake at saturation. It was then proposed that the swelling excess (about 2% and 1% for unpigmented coating and pigmented coatings respectively) was related to the internal stress relaxation of the polymer network during immersion.
ISSN:0300-9440
1873-331X
DOI:10.1016/j.porgcoat.2019.105438