Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1469625 | Corrosion Science | 2012 | 10 Pages |
Preoxidised Cu surfaces and powdery Cu oxides were exposed to SO2 vapour in an oxygen-deprived humid atmosphere. The reaction products were investigated by XRD and SEM-EDX. Chevreul’s salt, Cu2SO4·CuSO4·2H2O results to be the only stable product. Cu(0) is detected in experiments on Cu(I) oxide. Based on the competition between Cu(I) disproportionation and Cu(II) reduction by SO2, a reaction pathway is proposed. Initially formed Chevreul’s salt exhibits orthorhombic symmetry and a phase transformation to the stable monoclinic structure occurs upon ageing at room temperature. A mechanistic analogy with bronze disease of archaeological artefacts has been pointed out.
► Chevreul’s salt was formed by exposing a range of Cu oxides to hypoxic, humid SO2. ► The role of tenorite and cuprite in Chevreul’s salt formation has been pinpointed. ► Starting from tenorite, Cu(II) is directly reduced to Cu(0) without Cu(I) formation. ► Starting from cuprite, disproportionation of Cu(I) yields sulphite. ► Orthorhombic Cu2SO4·CuSO4·2H2O initially forms and changes to monoclinic upon ageing.