Title: Electrochemical Theory
1Electrochemical Theory
2Kinetics of Activation Controlled Reactions
- M ? Mn ne-
- rate of reaction depends on potential according
to the Tafel equation
3Tafels Law
Slope ?
Slope b
b2.303?
Potential
E0a
ln i
i0,a
log i
4Charge Transfer Resistance
- Charge transfer resistance local slope of i
versus E curve (not log i)
5Charge Transfer Resistance
- Note that charge transfer resistance is not a
constant, but depends on the applied current
density - If we could measure the charge transfer
resistance, we could determine the current density
6Dependence of Kinetics on Reactant Concentration
- More reactant allows reaction to go faster, hence
rate is proportional to reactant concentration - e.g. oxygen reduction
Surface concentration of oxygen
Minus sign because thisis a cathodic
reaction(and ?c is taken as positive)
7Tafels Law
Cathodic reaction - rate increases
withdecreasing potential
Rate with constantsurface concentrationof oxygen
Rate with surface concentration of oxygen
varying
E0c
Potential
ln i
i0,c
log i
ilim
8Mixed Potential Theory
- Net current density on freely-corroding electrode
must be zero. - Therefore potential (Ecorr) will be that at which
anodic and cathodic current densities are equal
and opposite. - Called a mixed equilibrium (not a true
electrochemical equilibrium)
9Tafels Law
Potential
log i
10Tafels Law
E0c
Potential
ln i
i0,c
log i
ilim
11Electrical Units
12Charge
- Results from inbalance between electrons and
protons in a metal, or between anions and cations
in a solution - Unit the coluomb, C
- Charge on the electron 1.6 x 10-19 C
13Current
- Flow of charge past a point in a conductor
(either electron or ion) - Unit the Amp, A
14Conservation of Charge
- Charge can be neither created nor destroyed
- Hence, the currents into and out of a point in an
electrical circuit must add up to zero
(Kirchoffs Law)
15Potential
- The potential at a point in space is the work
done in moving a unit charge to that point from
infinity. - Units of volts, V (J/C)
16Potential Difference (or Voltage)
- The potential difference or voltage is the
difference between the potentials at two points,
and hence the work done in moving a unit charge
from one point to the other. - Units of Volts
17Resistance
- A resistor (conventional symbol R) is a device
that produces a voltage across its terminals when
a current passes through it - Ohms Law VIR
- R is the resistance of the resistor
- Units Ohms, ?
- 1 V is produced by a current of 1 A through a
resistance of 1 ?
18Capacitance
- A capacitor (conventional symbol C) is a device
that stores charge when a current is applied to
it - Units of capacitance Farads, F
- I C dV/dt
- A 1 F capacitor will produce a voltage increase
of 1 V/s when a current of 1 A flows into it
19Equivalent Circuits
- An electrical circuit with the same properties as
a metal-solution interface - The simplest circuit is a resistor, corresponding
to the polarization resistance, in parallel with
a capacitor, corresponding to the double layer
capacitance
20Equivalent Circuits
- An electrical circuit with the same properties as
a metal-solution interface - The Randles equivalent circuit adds a series
resistor, corresponding to the solution resistance
21Potential Measurement
22Electrode Potential
- The potential of a metal electrode with respect
to a solution. - BUT the charge carriers in a metal are electrons,
while the charge carriers in a solution are ions. - So how do we measure it?
23Measurement of Electrode Potential
- Use arbitrary reference electrode to convert from
ion current to electron current. - Conventional standard reference electrode is
based on the reaction
Hydrogen ions in solution at unit activity
Hydrogen gas in solution at unit activity
Electrons in the metal
24The Normal Hydrogen Electrode (NHE)
25Secondary Reference Electrodes
- Reference electrodes of the first kind, a metal
in equilibrium with a soluble salt
Potential controlled by Cu2 concentration
26Secondary Reference Electrodes
- Reference electrodes of the second kind, a metal
in equilibrium with a sparingly soluble salt and
a solution containing anions of the salt
Ag concentration controls equilibrium potential
Chloride concentration controls Ag concentration
AgCl- const
27The Ag/AgCl Electrode
28Potentials of Common Reference Electrodes
29Practical Potential Measurement
30Potential Measurement Requirements - Input
Resistance
- High input resistance to minimize errors due to
source resistance. - For most corrosion work 107 ohm is sufficient,
but for high resistance systems (paints, passive
metals etc.) 109 ohm or more may be better.
31Potential Measurement Requirements - Frequency
Response
- Frequency response (ability to detect rapid
changes). Often not important for corrosion
measurements. - Measurements at around 1 Hz are quite easy
- Measurements above 1kHz are rather more difficult
- Measurements at around 50 Hz are difficult (due
to mains frequency interference).
32Potential Measurement Requirements - Resolution
- Resolution is the ability to detect small changes
in a large value
33Potential Measurement Requirements - Resolution
- Resolution is the ability to detect small changes
in a large value - for most corrosion measurements 1 mV is adequate
34Potential Measurement Requirements - Resolution
- Resolution is the ability to detect small changes
in a large value - for most corrosion measurements 1 mV is adequate
- for electrochemical noise and similar studies,
1mV may be necessary
35Potential Measurement Requirements - Sensitivity
- Resolution is the ability to detect small changes
in a large value
- Sensitivity is the ability to measure small
values - e.g. it is relatively easy to obtain a
sensitivity of 1 mV when measuring 1 mV, but it
is very difficult to obtain a resolution of 1 mV
when measuring a 10 V signal - not usually a problem for corrosion measurements
36Potential Measurement Requirements - Precision
- Resolution is the ability to detect small changes
in a large value - Sensitivity is the ability to measure small
values - Precision or accuracy is the ability to measure
the true value
37Potential Measurement Methods
- Analogue meter (moving coil)
- low impedance (typically 20 kohm/V)
- poor frequency response (1 Hz)
- low sensitivity (1 mV)
- low resolution (1)
- low precision (3)
38Potential Measurement Methods
- Analogue meter (electronic)
- high impedance (typically 10 Mohm)
- poor frequency response (1 Hz)
- possibly high sensitivity (1mV)
- low resolution (1)
- low precision (3)
39Potential Measurement Methods
- Digital meter
- high impedance (typically 10 Mohm or more)
- poor frequency response (around 3 Hz)
- high sensitivity (10 mV to 100 nV)
- high resolution (0.1 to 0.0001)
- high precision (0.1 to 0.0001)
40Potential Measurement Methods
- Electrometer (digital)
- very high impedance (1014 ohm)
- poor frequency response (lt1 Hz)
- high sensitivity (1 mV to 100 nV)
- high resolution (0.1 to 0.001)
- high precision (0.1 to 0.001)
41Potential Measurement Methods
- Chart recorder
- impedance depends on instrument (from 103 to 107
ohm) - moderate frequency response (10 Hz)
- moderate sensitivity (10mV)
- moderate resolution (0.1)
- moderate precision (0.1)
42Potential Measurement Methods
- Oscilloscope
- high impedance (106 to 107 ohm)
- high frequency response (10 MHz or more)
- moderate sensitivity (100mV)
- poor resolution (1)
- poor precision (1)
43Potential Measurement Methods
- Computer data acquisition
- high impedance (107 ohm)
- variable frequency response (10 Hz to 1 MHz or
more) - moderate to good sensitivity (10 mV)
- moderate to good resolution (0.5 to 0.01)
- moderate to good precision (0.5 to 0.01)
- facilitates subsequent plotting and analysis
44Practical Current Measurement
45Current Measurement Requirements - Input
Resistance
- Low input resistance to minimize errors due to
voltage drop across measuring device. - For most corrosion work 1 mV voltage drop will
have little effect. - A wide dynamic range (ratio of largest current to
smallest current) is required for many corrosion
measurements.
46Current Measurement Methods
- Analogue meter (moving coil)
- usually poor input resistance ( 75 mV drop at
full scale) - poor frequency response (around 1 Hz)
- low resolution (around 1)
- low precision (around 3)
- dynamic range acceptable using range switching
47Current Measurement Methods
- Analogue meter (electronic)
- usually poor input resistance (100 mV drop at
full scale) - poor frequency response (around 1 Hz)
- low resolution (around 1)
- low precision (around 3)
- dynamic range acceptable using range switching
48Current Measurement Methods
- Digital multimeter
- often poor input impedance (100 mV drop at full
scale) - poor frequency response (around 3 Hz)
- high resolution (0.1 to 0.0001)
- high precision (0.1 to 0.0001)
- often poor sensitivity (100 mA to 1 mA)
- dynamic range acceptable using autoranging
49Current Measurement Methods
- Electrometer (digital)
- essentially zero input impedance
- poor frequency response (lt1 Hz)
- high resolution (0.1 to 0.001)
- high precision (0.1 to 0.001)
- good dynamic range using range switching or
autoranging
50Current Measurement Methods
- Chart recorder
- resistor used to convert current to voltage,
hence voltage drop depends on sensitivity - moderate frequency response (10 Hz)
- moderate resolution (0.1)
- moderate precision (0.1)
- acceptable dynamic range providing range
switching is used
51Current Measurement Methods
- Oscilloscope
- resistor used to convert current to voltage,
hence voltage drop depends on sensitivity - high frequency response (10 MHz or more)
- poor resolution (1)
- poor precision (1)
- poor dynamic range
52Current Measurement Methods
- Computer data acquisition
- resistor used to convert current to voltage,
hence voltage drop depends on sensitivity - variable frequency response (10 Hz to 1 MHz or
more) - moderate to good resolution (0.5 to 0.01)
- moderate to good precision (0.5 to 0.01)
- dynamic range often limited
- facilitates subsequent plotting and analysis