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CHEMISTRY, ELECTROCHEMISTRY, ANDELECTROCHEMICAL APPLICATIONS Contents Aluminum Carbon Iron Hydrogen Lead Lithium Manganese Nickel Oxygen Platinum Group Elements Silver Zinc Aluminum Q Li

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CHEMISTRY, ELECTROCHEMISTRY, AND

ELECTROCHEMICAL APPLICATIONS

Contents

Aluminum

Carbon

Iron

Hydrogen

Lead

Lithium

Manganese

Nickel

Oxygen

Platinum Group Elements

Silver

Zinc

Aluminum

Q Li, JO Jensen, and NJ Bjerrum,Technical University of Denmark, Lyngby, Denmark

& 2009 Elsevier B.V All rights reserved.

Introduction

Aluminum is the most abundant metallic element, making

up about 8% by weight of the Earth’s crust It is a

silvery-white metal and belongs to group III of the periodic table

Its atomic number is 13 and atomic weight 26.981 54 Pure

aluminum is soft and ductile However, it can be alloyed

with small amounts of copper, magnesium, and silicon to

increase its strength and impart a number of useful

prop-erties such as high strength, good ductility, and low density

The most common aluminum alloy, A6061, for example,

contains copper (0.15–0.6%), magnesium (0.8–1.2%), silicon

(0.4–0.8%), zinc (o0.25%), and iron (o0.7%), and is

widely used as a vital structural component in aerospace,

automotive, railroad, and other industrial applications

Chemically, aluminum is very reactive Whenever a

freshly created aluminum surface is exposed to air or water

at room temperature, an oxide film forms immediately and

grows to a thickness of about 5 nm in air and to a somewhat

greater thickness in water This oxide layer is impervious

and adherent to the metal surface, protecting aluminum

from further corrosion It is this oxide layer that makes

aluminum remarkable for its corrosion and wear resistance

Aluminum surface coatings onto other metallic substrates

are a well-known technology for corrosion protection

Anodizing, an electrolytic passivation process to increase

the thickness of the natural oxide layer on the surface of

metal parts, forms an important part of aluminum elec-trochemistry and offers better use of the oxide layer The electrochemically prepared oxide layers can be either porous or barrier type, the former providing corrosion re-sistance and allowing for coloring the surface with organic dyes, pigment impregnation, or electrolytic deposition of other metals and the latter being dielectric and character-izing the capacity of aluminum electrolyte capacitors From an energy storage and conversion point of view, aluminum is a very attractive anode material The for-mation of the oxide surface layer on an aluminum anode, however, causes a significant decrease in the reversible electrode potential as well as a time lag in reaching the operating potential of a battery Activation of the alu-minum electrode and depression of the parasitic cor-rosion are the main focus for developing aluminum alloys

as anodes for batteries as well as for cathodic protection Electrochemically, aluminum belongs to the group of metals with very negative electrode potentials Electro-chemical deposition of aluminum from any aqueous media

is therefore impossible owing to the hydrogen evolution at the cathode Consequently, electrolytic production, refining, and plating of aluminum as well as development of re-chargeable aluminum batteries require nonaqueous elec-trolytes, that is, either molten salts or organic electrolytes This article starts with a brief summary of chemistry of aluminum with emphasis on its behavior in different

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