Abstract

The specific corrosion behavior of quenching-induced η precipitate is usually ignored. In this work, the corrosion initiation and propagation of Al-Zn-Mg-Cu alloy after different quenching rates and ageing are studied by quasi-in-situ corrosion and microchemical analysis. The quenching-induced precipitates act as cathodes to trigger corrosion, and the morphology changes from deep pit-like into reticular intergranular corrosion with the quenching rate decreasing. After artificial ageing, Zn and Mg atoms in solute-depletion zone are consumed and migrate into quenching-induced precipitates or form ageing-induced precipitates. This enhances the potential of precipitation-free zone and improves the corrosion resistance of aged samples.

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