Abstract

Magnesium-rich primers perform very well on outdoor exposure and actual test conditions, yet fail rapidly in accelerated corrosion testing (salt spray test – ASTM B117). To investigate the behavioral dichotomy, Mg-rich primers exposed to salt spray testing and natural weathering were characterized at periodic intervals. The results revealed the presence of a thin and porous magnesium hydroxide layer in primers exposed to salt spray, and in natural exposure, a thicker, protective magnesium carbonate layer was detected and characterized. Samples exposed to atmospheric carbon dioxide exhibit excellent corrosion resistance but salt spray conditions are not conducive to facilitate magnesium carbonate formation.

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