Photolithographic fabrication of a micro-electrode surface on a carbon steel sheet for local hydrogen permeation measurements

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Abstract

Microelectrodes for hydrogen permeation measurements were fabricated by photolithography. Although the application of a positive-type photoresist coating was effective for the formation of a circle-shaped pattern with a diameter of several tens of micrometers on an iron surface, the coating had poor adhesion to the iron surface and poor durability in an H2SO4 solution. However, the addition of a silica coating derived from tetraethoxysilane (TEOS) on the iron surface as an inner layer resulted in improvement of durability as well as resistance of the coating. Furthermore, the introduction of a layer derived from a mixture of TEOS and glycidyl 3-trimethoxysilylpropyl ether (GPTMS) between the inner layer derived from TEOS and the photoresist coating resulted in long durability showing a large impedance of more than 109 Ω cm2 for 4×105 s in an H2SO4 solution. Cathodic polarization of the microelectrode on the iron surface revealed that the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) rate is dependent on the plane orientation of the surface. HER rate on an SCM435 steel surface also strongly depended on the microstructure and hardness of the local surface.

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Koji, F., Nozomi, I., Ayako, N., Yuichi, K., Yasuchika, H., & Yasutaka, M. (2021). Photolithographic fabrication of a micro-electrode surface on a carbon steel sheet for local hydrogen permeation measurements. ISIJ International, 61(4), 1112–1119. https://doi.org/10.2355/isijinternational.ISIJINT-2020-316

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