In this paper the anticorrosion properties of steel bars coated with polymer modified cement-based coatings in chloride solution were evaluated. Then the pullout tests were conducted using coated and uncoated steel bars embedded in concrete specimens and the bond properties between concrete and bars were tested. The results show the steel bars coated with epoxy emulsion modified cement-based coating (HY) and elastic copolymer emulsion modified cement-based coating (GT) have satisfactory anticorrosion properties in 3.5% NaCl solution for 96h. But the pullout tests display that the bond strength between the concrete and the steel bars coated with GT coating is much lower than that of the bars coated with HY coating and the uncoated specimens. The bond stress between the concrete and the bars coated with pure acrylate emulsion modified cement-based (CB) coating is the highest among the three coatings, but the resistance to chloride permeability of CB coating is poor. The results indicate the special epoxy-cement-based coating (HY) is more suitable for applying to the anticorrosion coating for steel bars in chloride condition.
0.82NBT-0.18ST and 0.85NBT-0.15ST thin films have been prepared on Si substrates by a modified metalorganic solution deposition process. To achieve films with better ferroelectric properties, three main items have been changed in the process. Then the crystal structures, surface microstructures, hysteresis loops, fatigue curves and capacitance-voltage curves of the films were measured. It can be found that NBT-ST films can crystallize well after annealing at 650 °C for 5 minutes and have smooth surface microstructures. The 0.85NBT-0.15ST thin films exhibit better well-defined hysteresis loops than 0.82NBT-0.18ST, with a remnant polarization of 1.1 mC/cm2 and a coercive fields of 44.2 kV/cm. The clockwise C-V curves show that they have a desired polarization-type switching mode. The memory window of 0.82NBT-0.18ST thin film is about 1.8V, and that of 0.85NBT-0.15ST thin film is about 2.5V.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.