Corrosion protective performance evaluation of structural aircraft coatings in cyclic salt spray, outdoor and In-Service environments

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Abstract

Eliminating hexavalent chromium-based corrosion inhibitors from structural aircraft coatings remains a significant challenge, primarily due to the lack of reliable accelerated test methods. This study evaluates the performance of various structural aircraft coatings under different exposure conditions, i.e. outdoor exposure, cyclic salt spray testing and in-service conditions, supplemented by environmental sensors. Quarterly inspections and scanning electron microscopy were used to evaluate corrosion damage. The findings highlight a lack of correlation between accelerated testing and outdoor exposure testing, likely driven by disparities in salt deposition, UV-radiation, time of wetness and temperature cycling. Additionally, galvanic couples between skin and fasteners remain difficult to protect, with chromate-based systems offering limited inhibition and alternative systems struggling to protect such complex assemblies. However, in lap-joints, alternative coatings outperformed chromate-based counterparts, likely due to their polymer matrices providing improved barrier properties, hence limiting access of electrolyte to the coating-aluminium alloy interface.