The structure and electronic properties of passive and prepassive films of iron in borate buffer
By Harrington, Scott P.; Wang, Feng & Devine, Thomas M.
Published in Electrochimica Acta
2010
Abstract
The films that form on pure iron during potentiodynamic anodic polarization in aqueous borate buffer were investigated by surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS), and by electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and Mott–Schottky analysis at selected potentials. According to SERS, the passive film is a bilayer film with an outer layer of an as yet undetermined Fe(III)oxide/hydroxide, identified by a strong Raman peak at 560 cm-1. The inner layer was a spinel compound. The capacitances of passive iron were frequency dependent and a constant phase element (CPE) best described the frequency dispersion. Current increases in cathodic polarization scans confirmed the accuracy of flatband potentials calculated from Mott–Schottky tests at two different film formation potentials. Both films were found to be n-type and flatband potentials of -846 and -95 mV vs. SHE and carrier densities of 1.6 à-- 1022 and 8.3 à-- 1020/cm3 were found for films grown at -500 and +1000 mV, respectively. The cathodic polarization curve of passivated iron exhibited a complex shape that was explained by the electronic properties of iron's passive and prepassive films. The reductive dissolution of the films abruptly began when the potential was lowered below their flatband potentials. It is suggested that the cathodic polarization behavior contributes to iron's susceptibility to localized corrosion.