This study reports that titanium nanoparticles can be used as a surface coating to enhance the corrosion resistance of 316 stainless steel. It specifically examines the influence of the deposition temperature (T
dep) on the coating’s structural and morphological properties, including corrosion
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This study reports that titanium nanoparticles can be used as a surface coating to enhance the corrosion resistance of 316 stainless steel. It specifically examines the influence of the deposition temperature (T
dep) on the coating’s structural and morphological properties, including corrosion behavior. TiO
2 nanoparticles were thoughtfully deposited on steel substrates at temperatures of 300, 400, and 500 °C using a horizontal hot-wall tubular reactor. This equipment was expertly engineered at the CIDETEQ laboratory through the metal–organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) concept. Titanium isopropoxide [Ti(OC
3H
7)
4] was used as the precursor for the coating synthesis. Structural analysis was conducted using X-ray diffraction (XRD), energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS), and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Corrosion performance was evaluated under accelerated conditions in 0.5 M H
2SO
4 using potentiodynamic anodic polarization (AP), cyclic voltammetry (CV), and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS). The corrosion test indicates that increasing T
dep significantly differentiates the coating morphology and improves corrosion resistance. AP revealed that the pitting potential (E
pit) shifted to more positive values, ranging from +1.4 to +1.5 V. CV voltammograms indicated that coated samples had lower passive current densities (I
p ≈ 10
4 to 10
5 A/cm
2) than the bare substrate. EIS analysis demonstrated that the coating deposited at 500 °C processed the most favorable electrochemical performance, resisting corrosion for over 28 days. This coating achieved the highest electrical resistance (297 kΩ·cm
2) and the lowest capacitance (2.7 μF/cm
2), attributed to the formation of a crystalline anatase phase composed of pyramidal-like nanoparticle agglomerates (~40 nm). The dense packing structure effectively blocks charge-transfer pathways, restricting electron and ion transfer. Finally, MOCVD-based chemical surface modification with TiO
2 nanoparticles is considered an innovative method to improve the corrosion resistance of stainless steel, thereby prolonging its durability under accelerated sulfuric acid exposure.
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