Degradation of structural aircraft coatings in cyclic salt spray testing, outdoor exposure, and in-service environments

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Authors

Cornet, A.J.
Homborg, A.M.
Hoen - Velterop, L. 't
Mol, J.M.C.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer

License Holder

Copyright © 2026, The authors

Licence Type

CC BY 4.0

Sponsor

Abstract

Developing accelerated exposure tests that accurately predict the in-service performance of structural aircraft coatings remains challenging, largely due to the complexity of simulating real-world environmental conditions without altering key degradation mechanisms. This study evaluated four different coating systems under various accelerated exposure tests and compared their degradation behavior to in-service performance. Coating degradation was characterized using electrochemical impedance spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. Under in-service conditions, failure was primarily driven by the leaching of corrosion inhibitors, while the polymer matrix degraded predominantly through hydrolysis and thermo-oxidation. In contrast, during outdoor- or cyclic salt spray exposure, inhibitor leaching remained a key contributor to coating degradation although polymer degradation was mainly caused by ultraviolet radiation or hydrolysis. These findings emphasize the challenge of replicating real-world degradation in laboratory settings. Additionally, anodized oxide layers containing polymers within their pores played a critical role in maintaining protection during early coating failure. Chromate-based systems restored barrier properties, likely through chromate adsorption on hydrolyzed products within the oxide pores. In comparison, praseodymium-based systems failed to restore protection, while lithium-based systems sustained protection through an intact polymer.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Cornet, A.J., Homborg, A.M., ‘t Hoen-Velterop, L. et al. Degradation of structural aircraft coatings in cyclic salt spray testing, outdoor exposure, and in-service environments. J Coat Technol Res (2026). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11998-025-01190-9

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By