Abstract

Carbon steel is one of the most employed materials in many industrial sectors due to its unique physical and mechanical properties. However, within a certain period of time, carbon steel-based materials are susceptible to corrosion under operating conditions and corrosion inhibitors are important to extending the limit of use of carbon steel. In this study, the influence of protoporphyrin from animal blood hemin as an eco-friendly corrosion inhibitor for T22 carbon steel in an acidic environment (0.5 M HCl) was conducted. The hemin isolated from animal blood extracts was modified to obtain the protoporphyrin. The dosage of protoporphyrin was varied between 40 and 200 ppm and the temperature influence were studied in the range of 298–318 K. The inhibition efficiency of protoporphyrin in 0.5 M hydrochloric acid reached up to 46.2% at a dose of 160 ppm at a temperature of 298 K. The inhibition efficiency (IE) value further decreases with increasing temperature, thereby showing the process exothermic in nature and the weakening of the inhibitor molecules to adsorb on the surface of the T22 carbon steel. The potentiodynamic polarization measurements indicate that protoporphyrin acts as a mixed-type inhibitor. The adsorption of protoporphyrin on the surface of T22 carbon steel obeys the Langmuir adsorption isotherm. The thermodynamic parameter of adsorption allows us to suggest the adsorption process was dominated by physical adsorption. Thus, these current results present a case study using protoporphyrin as a promising green inhibitor for carbon steel T22 in hydrochloric acid prepared from livestock waste.

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