Source:
Peter Sherwood, 785-532-6665 or send e-mail to escachem@k-state.edu
News release prepared by: Mark Berry, 785-532-6415
Thursday,
April 18, 2002
SUPERFICIAL
SCIENCE - SURFACE CHEMISTRY PROTECTS METALS
MANHATTAN
-- It's a fundamental truth that anything people build will eventually
wear away.
But
new advances in the chemistry of the surface of materials are helping
to hold that off for as long as possible.
"At
least 20 percent of bridges in the United States are in a serious structural
condition. The cost to the nation of corrosion is something like half
the cost of health care, so it's a very big problem," said Peter
Sherwood, university distinguished professor and head of the chemistry
department at Kansas State University.
For
30 years, he has studied the chemistry of surfaces, which are the top
few atoms on a material. The surface is the part of an object that meets
the environment.
"Corrosion
is the eating away of all the material. If that surface was protected,
it would prevent an attack on the interior," Sherwood said.
Iron
is a fairly unreactive metal, but it corrodes because oxygen from the
air reacts with its surface, causing it to turn into the brittle, red
material we call rust. It has no protective barrier. Aluminum is highly
reactive, yet it is protected from corrosion by a thin layer of oxidized
aluminum, which is impervious to oxygen and water. In other words, oxygen
actually helps aluminum and hurts iron.
"If
you look around us, every metal has an oxide on it, and that can be
good, in case of aluminum, or bad in the case of iron," he said.
Sherwood's
investigation of surface oxides on aluminum alloys is being published
in the Journal of Vacuum Science and Technology this year.
His
newest protective process uses phosphates - not oxides - to bond with
the surface of a metal. His group now uses an inexpensive method that
reacts metal with phosphoric acid, resulting in a protective barrier
of oxide-free, phosphate film.
In
March, Sherwood's group received a new $426,000 grant from the National
Science Foundation to continue the work. Phosphate-coated metals could
be useful for people with surgically implanted devices like artificial
hips, since they are safer than oxidized metal inside the human body.
"The
new surfaces are likely to be corrosion-resistant, because phosphate
is a good corrosion inhibitor. Phosphates are friendlier to biological
molecules. They also promote the adhesion of one material to another,"
he said.
The
surface chemistry studies have a direct impact on the interior walls
of cylinders with high gas pressure, such as the cylinders used by hospitals,
fire fighters and scuba divers. Sherwood's group works on coatings for
cylinders that won't react with the gas.
The
gas cylinder company Luxfer, which has supported Sherwood's research
for years, funded instruments used to study the chemistry of the interior
surfaces of cylinders.
"If
you are a scuba diver, you want to be sure the gas is pure. It's very
important to have that surface appropriately tuned to the particular
gas," Sherwood said. "This is a fascinating problem. We are
doing basic chemistry, but the understanding leads to very substantial
improvements in practical applications."
Metals
aren't the only materials with applications in surface chemistry. Sherwood
develops something called "advanced materials," in which carbon
fibers are weaved into a carbon or epoxy matrix. The result is a lightweight
material that is just as strong as conventional metals.
Early
carbon fiber-matrix materials broke easily under heavy stress. But fibers
can adhere better to the matrix when its surface is chemically altered,
making the material three times stronger. Sherwood's group tailors surface
treatments to different matrices and fibers.
"We've
now optimized the chemical attraction between a particular matrix and
a fiber," he said.
Kansas State University
is a comprehensive, research, land-grant institution first serving students
and the people of Kansas, and also the nation and the world.