Bubbles are key to new surface coating method for lightweight magnesium alloys
Cavitation helps give coatings improved corrosion resistance
2025-06-07
(Press-News.org)
Tokyo, Japan – A team led by a researcher from Tokyo Metropolitan University has devised a new way of coating magnesium alloys to improve their corrosion resistance. Instead of costly, unwieldy, and slower coating techniques under vacuum, they used liquid-based chemical conversion coating with the addition of cavitation bubbles. The resulting thick coating helped improve corrosion resistance to chlorides and mechanical properties. The team’s new technology is aimed at reinforcing lightweight materials in electric cars.
As the automobile industry undergoes radical changes to transition to electric vehicles, a quiet revolution in materials science is helping develop lighter materials that ensure the same batteries take the same cars over longer distances. Magnesium alloys have been a major player in this shift, boasting the lowest density of all practical metals. However, it is far from perfect; there are worries around their corrosion resistance against chlorides (salts) and undesirable mechanical properties. While magnesium-based composites have been proposed as an alternative, they are costly to produce and suffer from complicated manufacturing processes.
Another approach altogether is to apply a coating to conventional magnesium alloys, a series of methods known as plating. However, most examples of plating rely on the slow deposition of ceramic particles, giving rise to weak adhesion between the original substrate material and the coated layer. Many processes also require a vacuum chamber; not only is this costly, the deposition of particles often requires high temperatures. This is hardly feasible for magnesium alloys, which have a relatively low melting point.
This inspired a team led by Assistant Professor Masataka Ijiri from Tokyo Metropolitan University to turn to chemical conversion coating, where surfaces to be coated are exposed to a liquid. But while liquid-based methods are cheaper and easier than plating, the layers created are often too thin, leading to poor corrosion resistance. In experiments carried out in water with phosphoric acid, the team found that the addition of cavitation at the surface, the creation and subsequent violent collapse of bubbles, led to the formation of thick, even films of magnesium phosphate. Both methods tested, using jets of bubbles fired at surfaces (water jet peening) and a multifunction method where the same jets are exposed to ultrasound waves (multifunction cavitation), led to the formation of protective layers with significantly improved properties compared to liquid treatment alone. They were able to demonstrate particularly marked improvement in corrosion resistance to chlorides, as shown using electrochemical tests.
While using whole magnesium composite parts may give desirable results, the cost of such parts means that a method to selectively and controllably apply coatings to cheaper magnesium alloy is a more feasible alternative for industry. The team’s technology promises big strides forward in improved materials for the next generation of electric vehicles.
This work was supported by the Light Metal Educational Foundation and the Proterial Materials Science Foundation.
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2025-06-06
PHILADELPHIA (June 4, 2025) - New research from the Monell Chemical Senses Center and Temple University about nutritional biomarkers using carbon and nitrogen stable isotope ratios showed very different results in children versus adults, which points the way to better understanding the role of added sugars in overall dietary patterns across the lifespan.
Overall, added sugar intake by Americans well exceeds amounts recommended by the federal government. This is concerning because excess intake is associated with chronic diseases such as diabetes and obesity. ...
2025-06-06
Miami, Fl. — Giant viruses play a role in the survival of single-celled marine organisms called protists. These include algae, amoeba, and flagellates, that form the base of ocean food webs. And since these protists form an important part of the food chain, these large DNA viruses are often responsible for various public health hazards, including harmful algal blooms.
A new study from scientists at the Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric and Earth Science may help unravel the many types of viruses present in our waterways and oceans. This knowledge could help local leaders better ...
2025-06-06
With careful planning and a little luck, researchers found a surprising upside to hurricanes after a Category 4 storm disrupted their expedition off the coast of Mexico.
The team was able to sample the ocean right after the storm passed and found that the storms churn the ocean so powerfully and deeply — up to thousands of meters — that nutrient-rich, cold water is brought to the surface.
The resulting phytoplankton blooms — visible in satellite imagery taken from space — are a feast for bacteria, zooplankton, small fish, and filter-feeding animals such as shellfish ...
2025-06-06
RIVERSIDE, Calif. -- A study led by biomedical scientists at the University of California, Riverside School of Medicine shows how a genetic mutation associated with Crohn’s disease can worsen iron deficiency and anemia — one of the most common complications experienced by patients with inflammatory bowel disease, or IBD.
While IBD — a group of chronic inflammatory disorders that includes Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis — primarily affects the intestines, it can have effects beyond the gut. Iron deficient ...
2025-06-06
Chagas disease is often called a silent killer because many people don’t realize they have it until complications from the infection kill them.
Researchers at the University of Cincinnati are exploring ways to interrupt the lifecycle of the parasite behind the illness, offering hope of developing a cure.
The disease is spread by parasites found in kissing bugs, which suck the blood of people when they are sleeping. The bugs typically bite victims around their faces, which gives them their ironically sweet-sounding name. The bugs transmit the internal parasites in their poop, which infects the bloodstream of human hosts through the bite wounds.
The study was published ...
2025-06-06
East Hanover, NJ – June 6, 2025 – The latest National Trends in Disability Employment (nTIDE) report shows that people with disabilities maintain connection to the workforce as the economy slows and the supply chains brace for the potential impact of tariffs. nTIDE is issued by Kessler Foundation and the University of New Hampshire’s Institute on Disability.
Month-to-Month nTIDE Numbers (comparing April 2025 to May 2025)
Based on data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Jobs Report released today, the employment-to-population ratio for people with disabilities (ages ...
2025-06-06
MADISON — An international team of astronomers has trained a neural network with millions of synthetic simulations and artificial intelligence (AI) to tease out new cosmic curiosities about black holes, revealing the one at the center of our Milky Way is spinning at nearly top speed.
These large ensembles of simulations were generated by throughput computing capabilities provided by the Center for High Throughput Computing (CHTC), a joint entity of the Morgridge Institute for Research and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The astronomers published their results and methodology today in three papers in the journal Astronomy ...
2025-06-06
New genetic research is shedding light on why some children benefit more than others from orthokeratology lenses—an increasingly popular method to slow the progression of myopia. In the largest genome-wide study of its kind, scientists discovered that children who responded better to treatment carried a higher number of nonsynonymous mutations in genes associated with retinal diseases. Among the key players identified were RIMS2 and LCA5, genes involved in retinal function and visual processing. These insights not only reveal a biological basis for the variability in treatment outcomes but also pave the way for using genetic screening to personalize ...
2025-06-06
While kelp forests persist along northern Maine’s rocky coast, kelp abundance has declined by as much as 80% on the southern coast in recent decades. In its stead, carpet-like turf algae have moved in.
A team, led by scientists at Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, are examining the broad consequences of this shift. Their recently published research in Science Advances shows that predator-prey interactions and the flow of energy are fundamentally different on turf-dominated reefs compared to the remaining kelp forests.
Using ...
2025-06-06
KEY TAKEAWAYS:
Adding IL-12, a cytokine produced by various immune cells, to mRNA vaccines improves T cell responses
This could make the benefits of vaccines last longer
This is also a promising approach for reducing the risk of cancer
In the quest to design vaccines that better help the body’s immune system fight disease, scientists are always looking for more tools for their arsenal. The strong antibody responses generated by vaccines provide an important first round of defense, but “you always want to have a backup plan,” says Biomedical Graduate Studies Ph.D. student Emily A. Aunins, considering viruses mutate to evade antibody responses that ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Bubbles are key to new surface coating method for lightweight magnesium alloys
Cavitation helps give coatings improved corrosion resistance