npj Materials Degradation (Apr 2022)

An additively manufactured magnesium-aluminium alloy withstands seawater corrosion

  • Zhuoran Zeng,
  • Sanjay Choudhary,
  • Marco Esmaily,
  • Felix Benn,
  • Thomas Derra,
  • Yvonne Hora,
  • Alexander Kopp,
  • Antoine Allanore,
  • Nick Birbilis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41529-022-00241-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Magnesium, the lightest structural metal, has inherently poor corrosion resistance. In this study, we developed a magnesium-aluminium Mg-10.6Al-0.6Zn-0.3Mn alloy, additively manufactured by laser powder bed fusion. We reveal that this alloy has a record low degradation rate amongst all magnesium alloys in practically relevant corrosive solutions, and it even withstands seawater corrosion. As tested by a number of methods, the alloy shows even more enhanced passivation with longer immersion periods. The alloy surface following immersion maintained a nearly corrosion-free appearance and was determined to have a thin aluminium-containing surface film, due to surface enrichment of aluminium from the supersaturated matrix. Aluminium enrichment near the sample surface was also observed when the sample is immersed in phosphoric acid or exposed to atmosphere at room temperature. This study demonstrates the prospects for additively manufactured ultra-lightweight magnesium structure with outstanding corrosion resistance.