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Peculiarities in the Behaviour of Thiourea as corrosion-inhibitor

✍ Scribed by A. M. Shams El Din; A. A. El Hosary; R. M. Saleh; J. M. Abd El Kader


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1977
Tongue
German
Weight
634 KB
Volume
28
Category
Article
ISSN
0947-5117

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

The dissolution of Fe, cu, Zn and Al in nitric, hydrochlorid and sulfuric acids is retarded by low concentrations of thiourea, while higher thiourea concentrations may bring about a stimulation of corrosion. In nitric acid thiourea is probably oxidised (heat evolution); the dithioformamidine formed at first is then hydrolysed to give diaminocarbonyl disulfide which again is reduced to thiocarbamic acid at the cathodic sites of the surface. The depolarisation thus produced gives rise to accelerated dissolution. In non‐oxidising acids a monomolecular layer of thiourea is adsorbed at the metal at first; its subsequent reduction to sulfide and hydrogen sulfide again gives rise to an enhancement of corrosion. The critical concentration of the transition from inhibition to stimulation depends ont he type of the acid and its concentration.


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1-Methyl-3-pyridine-2-yl-thiourea as inh
✍ S. M. A. Hosseini; M. Salari; M. Ghasemi πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 2009 πŸ› John Wiley and Sons 🌐 German βš– 343 KB πŸ‘ 1 views

## Abstract The inhibiting effect of 1‐methyl‐3‐pyridine‐2‐yl‐thiourea (MPT) on the corrosion of stainless steel in 0.5 M H~2~SO~4~ solution was investigated using weight loss and potentiostatic polarization techniques. The percentage inhibition efficiencies and surface coverage degrees increased w