Abstract

The corrosion behaviour of a copper electrode in a 1 M HCl solution has been studied potentiokinetically at different temperatures ranging from 25 to 55 °C. The inhibition efficiency of four amino acids was then tested for three concentrations in the range 10 −5–10 −3 M. The amino acids, in the presence of HCl solution, caused a shift, mainly in the anodic direction of the corrosion potential at low current densities as well as the linear part of the cathodic Tafel line. The protection efficiency of each amino acid was calculated for different temperatures and concentrations. The amino acids act as a corrosion inhibitor in HCl solution through adsorption on the copper surface. The kinetic results, operating through a compensation effect, could well account for the variation of the inhibiting capacities of the various amino acids. The results reported in this paper elucidate the effect of temperature and the molecular structure on the inhibition efficiency, α-alanine was the most efficient of the four amino acids for inhibiting the corrosion of copper in HCl solution. Thermodynamic parameters for adsorption of the amino acids are calculated.

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