Effect of Microstructures and Material Compositions on Blister Formation
Yunan Prawoto. Jern Phye Tan Tan, Choon Yong Loh
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DOI: 10.4236/msa.2010.13025   PDF    HTML     5,285 Downloads   9,837 Views   Citations

Abstract

One of the early failures of coating is blister. Here two different coatings were applied on various materials and microstructures. The formation of the blister, and its microstructural and material dependencies were evaluated. It is concluded that general organic coating forms more severe blisters than that of the metallic effect coating. General organic coating protects the samples by insulation film while metallic coating protects by acting as galvanic protection. Therefore, the failure modes are also different, namely blister and filiform corrosion. The dependencies on the microstructures and on material types also follow the insulation film concept and galvanic protection concept.

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Tan, Y. and Loh, C. (2010) Effect of Microstructures and Material Compositions on Blister Formation. Materials Sciences and Applications, 1, 158-161. doi: 10.4236/msa.2010.13025.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

References

[1] J. R. Davis, “Surface Engineering for Corrosion and Wear Resistance,” American Society for Materials International, Materials Park, 2001.
[2] K. Stevens, “Surface Engineering to Combat Wear and Corrosion: A Design Guide,” The Institute of Materials, London, 1997.
[3] Z. W. Wicks, “Organic Coatings: Science and Technolo-gy,” Wiley-Interscience, Haboken, 2007.
[4] “ASTM Standard: D3359—07,” ASTM Annual Book of Standards, ASTM Publisher, West Conshohocken, 2007.

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