Inhibition of steel corrosion with imidazolium-based compounds -- experimental and theoretical study
Dominik Legut, Andrzej P. K\k{a}dzielawa, Petr P\'anek, Krist\'yna, Markov\'a, Petra V\'a\v{n}ov\'a, Kate\v{r}ina Kone\v{c}n\'a, and \v{S}\'arka, Langov\'a

TL;DR
This study combines experimental electrochemical and weight loss methods with quantum-mechanical modeling to analyze how imidazolium-based compounds inhibit mild steel corrosion in acidic solutions, revealing the importance of alkyl chain length.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive experimental and theoretical analysis of imidazolium salts as corrosion inhibitors, highlighting the dominant role of alkyl chain length over anion type.
Findings
Inhibition efficiency reaches up to 98% in weight loss experiments.
Alkyl chain length significantly influences inhibition performance.
Quantum calculations support experimental observations of electronic properties.
Abstract
This work aims to investigate the corrosion inhibition of the mild steel in the 1 M HCl solution by 1-octyl-3-methylimidazolium hydrogen sulphate 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium hydrogen sulphate, and 1-octyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride, using electrochemical, weight loss, and surface analysis methods as well as the full quantum-mechanical treatment. Polarization measurements prove that studied compounds are mixed-type inhibitors with a predominantly anodic reaction. The inhibition efficiency obtained from the polarization curves is about 80-92% for all of the 1-octyl-3-methylimidazolium salts with a concentration higher than 0.005 mol/l, while it is much lower for 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium hydrogen sulphate. The values measured in the weight loss experiments (after seven days) are to some extent higher (reaching up to 98% efficiency). Furthermore, we have shown that the influence of the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
