The present invention is directed to aluminum alloys and to the use as a protective anode. The aluminum alloys can be used also as a sacrificial metallic coating and as a galvanic pigment in a binder or polymeric protective coating.
Aluminum anode alloys were initially researched and developed in the 1960's and 1970's. A body of patents and papers were published during this time which detail the exploration of various additive elements to aluminum which would activate it (inhibit the formation of aluminum oxide) and tune the operating potential, or voltage, to match that of pure zinc.
The development of activated aluminum alloys began in the 1960's and intellectual property is documented in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,379,636 and 3,281,239 from Dow Chemical; U.S. Pat. No. 3,393,138 from Aluminum Laboratories Limited; and U.S. Pat. No. 3,240,688 from Olin Mathesin. All of these alloys were unique in that for the first time bulk aluminum alloys were shown to remain active and protect galvanically. Unfortunately, none were commercially successful as they all suffered from low efficiencies making them less economical than zinc anodes. During the 1970's Dow developed the aluminum-zinc-indium alloy, which they called Duralum III, which has very high efficiencies, approaching 90% of theoretical. This alloy became commercially available in 1988 with performance shown in
Based on the world-wide use of the Al—Zn—In and Al—Ga anode alloys, this new technology has the potential to be used similarly. Aluminum anodes specified in MIL-DTL-24779 are currently supplied by qualified companies Galvotec Alloys, Inc., McAllen, Tex. and BAC Corrosion Control, Herfolge, Denmark. Additional commercial suppliers include Performance Metal/Caldwell Castings, Cambridge, Md.; Canada Metal (Pacific) Ltd., Delta, BC, Canada; and Harbor Island Supply, Seattle, Wash.
The present invention relates to compositions of novel aluminum alloys designed to be coupled to materials with a higher operating potential (more positive) and act as a protective anode. The alloy could be used in bulk, applied by various methods as a sacrificial metallic coating, or made into a powder and used as a galvanic pigment in protective coatings such as a pigment in binders or polymeric coatings. The majority of the alloy is aluminum, with very small additions of tin (equal to or less than 0.2% by weight) and indium (equal to or less than 0.05% by weight) added to adjust the operating potential, activity, and efficiency of the alloys.
The novel feature of this invention is the very small addition of tin which is critical to control operating potential and efficiency. Prior art demonstrates aluminum anode alloys with tin, but higher amounts than the disclosed compositions. In addition, the efficiency of the higher tin alloys is low and thus not attractive for practical applications. Indium is added to stabilize the operating potential and enhance the efficiency of the alloys which would be otherwise lower if only tin were used.
The alloy compositions described herein are designed to have high operating efficiencies to make the alloy as cost-practical as possible, high current output to enable high and long-lasting performance for a given weight of anode (energy density), and optimized operating potential, which will vary depending on the application. An important added benefit is that the alloys of this invention do not contain zinc. The most used commercial aluminum anode alloy is aluminum-5% zinc-0.02% indium. This alloy is specified in MIL-DTL-24779 and has proven to be very effective in world-wide climates to protect a variety of materials including iron, steel, and aluminum piers, ships, off-shore rigs, and bridges among other applications. It is approximately 90% efficient, which is lower than pure zinc, which is about 98% efficient, but much higher than magnesium, which is about 60% efficient.
Unfortunately, zinc is an aquatic toxin and contains residual cadmium from the mining process. As such, many users are searching for a zinc-free alternative that has the same outstanding efficiency, current output and energy density. The alloy of this invention has the potential to replace the aluminum-zinc-indium alloy for use as described above. Moreover, Zinc is also more expensive than aluminum. The current spot price of zinc is $2.40 per kilogram versus aluminum, which is $1.77 per kilogram.
The important aspect of this invention is an aluminum anode alloy with the following ranges of composition:
Tin: 0.01 to 0.20 weight %
Indium: 0.005 to 0.05 weight %
Aluminum: balance
Impurities: per MIL-A-24779
Alloys with a range of tin and indium compositions were procured from Sophisticated Alloys, Butler, Pa. and ACI Alloys, Inc., San Jose, Calif. Compositions were melted in vacuum arc furnaces and cast into ceramic crucibles with no other heat treatments. Ingots were then sectioned into 0.5 inch thick “pucks”, ground and polished for electrochemical assessment. Separately, 1.0 inch cubes were also machined for efficiency testing. The anodes of the invention consist essentially of 99.9 percent by weight of aluminum and preferably high-purity aluminum of 99.99 percent by weight with tin ranging from about 0.01 to 0.20 percent and indium ranging from about 0.005 to 0.05 percent by weight.
The following weight percent alloys were assessed for operating potential efficiency and current output:
Open circuit potential was assessed using a Gamry 600 potentiostat and flat specimen test cell. Test solution was 3.5% sodium chloride agitated with continuous air bubbler. Efficiency and current output was assessed using NACE Method TM0190, as required in MIL-DTL-24779. Efficiency, current capacity, operating potential and other important parameters are shown in Table 1 for the new alloys as well as references.
13831
16531
27591
26131
1Average of two specimens
2Reference anode material
The disclosed aluminum alloys have several advantages over existing technology. The elimination of zinc addresses the aquatic toxicity and residual cadmium issues in the currently used Al—Zn—In—In alloys. Zinc is also considered a strategic metal; its replacement with aluminum reduces reliance on metal supply from foreign countries. Minimal use of activator elements: zinc, indium and tin are all more expensive than aluminum, so the less used, the lower the anode cost. For the preferred alloy, only 0.04 weight percent of activators is used, contributing only $0.08 per kilogram of the anode. Lower weight density of the preferred alloy is 2.701 grams per cubic centimeter (gm/cc) compared to 2.923 gm/cc for the Al—Zn—In alloy due to the elimination of zinc, which is significantly more dense (7.14 gm/cc) than the aluminum (2.70 gm/cc) which replaces it. This translates to a 7% reduction in weight for the same sized (volume) anode, which is significant as anode cost is mostly driven by the commodity price of the constituent elements. The lower density (and weight) also should lead to lower shipping and handling costs as well as stress on the structures on which the anodes are attached.
With higher current capacity as shown in Table 1, the leading Al-0.02% Sn-0.02% In alloy has a superior current capacity compared to the commercially available Al—Zn—In alloy, zinc and magnesium. This is due to its high efficiency, lower density, and three electrons per atom for Al vs two for zinc and magnesium. With lower cost per Amp-hour due to the high current capacity and current commodity cost of the elements used in the various anodes, the subject invention has a superior cost per Amp-hour, which is a key factor for users and suppliers. Table 2 shows the spot prices for the elements. Table 3 shows the cost per kilogram of each alloy, and the cost per Amp-hour for each.
The use of the aluminum alloy pigments of this invention in a binder or coating composition allows the corrosion-inhibiting aluminum pigment to be applied on substrates of different metals while improving the corrosion resistance of one metal without increasing the corrosion of a different metal component. The method comprises using a binder or coating on the metal which includes an effective amount of the aluminum alloy of this invention. The coatings can include organic systems such as a simple binder or an organic coating including paints and various other known metal inorganic or organic coatings.
For example, the binder or polymeric coating can range from about 50 to 90% or even up to about 99% or parts by weight of the total composition and the aluminum alloy pigment can range from about 0.1% up to 30% by weight of the binder or coating. The coatings include inorganic, polymeric or organic binders, such as paints, lubricants, oils, greases and the like.
Suitable binders include the polyisocyanate polymers or prepolymers including, for example, aliphatic polyisocyanate prepolymers, such as 1,6-hexamethylene diisocyanate homopolymer (“HDMI”) trimer and aromatic polyisocyanate prepolymers, such as 4,4′-methlenediiphenylisocyanate (“MDI”) prepolymer. A preferred binder for the aluminum alloy pigment comprise the polyurethanes, and more particularly the aliphatic polyurethanes derived from the reaction of polyols and multifunctional aliphatic isocyanates and the precursors of the urethanes.
Other binders include the epoxy polymers or epoxy prepolymers, for example, the epoxy resins, including at least one multifunctional epoxy resin. Among the commercially available epoxy resins are polyglycidyl derivatives of phenolic compounds, such as the tradenames EPON 828, EPON 1001 and EPON 1031.
While this invention has been described by a number of specific examples, it is obvious that there are other variations and modifications which can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as particularly set forth in the appended claims.
The invention described herein was made by employees of the United States Government and may be manufactured and used by or for the Government for governmental purposes without the payment of any royalties thereon or therefor.