Passivation is the process of making a material "passive" in relation to another material prior to using the materials together. For example, prior to storing hydrogen peroxide in an aluminium container, the container can be passivated by rinsing it with a dilute solution of nitric acid and peroxide alternating with deionized water. The nitric acid and peroxide oxidizes and dissolves any impurities on the inner surface of the container, and the deionized water rinses away the acid and oxidized impurities.
In the context of corrosion, passivation is the spontaneous formation of a hard non-reactive surface film that inhibits further corrosion. This layer is usually an oxide or nitride that is a few atoms thick. Under normal conditions of pH and oxygen concentration, passivation is seen in such materials as aluminium, magnesium, copper, stainless steel, titanium, and silicon. Ordinary steel can form a passivating layer in alkali environments, as rebar does in concrete. The conditions necessary for passivation are recorded in Pourbaix diagrams. Some corrosion inhibitors help the formation of a passivation layer on the surface of the metals to which they are applied.
Iron based (ferrous) materials, including steel, may be somewhat protected by promoting oxidation ("rust") and then converting the oxidation to a metalophosphate by using phosphoric acid and further protected by surface coating. As the uncoated surface is water-soluble a preferred method is to form manganese or zinc compounds by a process commonly known as Parkerizing. Older, less-effective but chemically-similar electrochemical conversion coatings included bluing, also known as black oxide.
Newer, proprietary (and/or trademarked) processes for conversion coatings include Parkerized for passivating steel, dating to roughly 1912, and Alodine for passivating aluminum; both are trademarked processes and are now owned by Henkle Surface Technologies. *,*
Chem film is any generic chromate conversion coating used to passivate aluminium. One such example is . In general, however, chromate can also mean any of several chromate conversion coatings that can be applied to a much wider range of metals and alloys than just to aluminum. In recent years, chromate coatings have become less popular due to concerns over environmental pollution from using such processes.
Iridite is another trademarked name of a whole family of proprietary conversion coatings owned by MacDermid. A competing conversion coating used on aluminum, that somewhat ameleriorates the environmental pollution concerns caused by chromate coatings, it often appears as a slightly yellowish coating, of roughly the same color as a yellow highlighter used to highlight notes in classroom lectures. *
Metallurgy | Corrosion prevention
Pasivace | Passivierung | Passivation | פסיבציה | 不働態 | Pasywacja
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