Search results for "Electrochemical Impedance Measurement"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Characterizing archaeological bronze corrosion products intersecting electrochemical impedance measurements with voltammetry of immobilized particles

2017

Application of electrochemical impedance measurements to microparticulate deposits of copper corrosion products attached to graphite electrodes in contact with 0.10 M aqueous HClO4 electrolyte is described. The impedance measurements were sensitive to the applied potential and the amount of solid sample and were modeled taking into account the contribution of the uncovered base electrode. Several pairs of circuit elements provide monotonic variations which are able to characterize different corrosion compounds regardless the amount of microparticulate solid on the electrode. Application to a set of archaeological samples from the archaeological Roman site of Gadara (Jordan, 4th century AD) …

Materials scienceGeneral Chemical EngineeringArchaeological bronze02 engineering and technologyElectrolyteengineering.material010402 general chemistryElectrochemistry01 natural sciencesCorrosionElectrochemistryElectrochemical Impedance MeasurementsBronzeVoltammetryElectrical impedanceVoltammetry of immobilized particlesMeasurementsMetallurgy021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyArchaeologyElectrochemical Impedance0104 chemical sciencesPINTURAElectrodeengineeringErosion corrosion of copper water tubes0210 nano-technology
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Influence of Anodic and Thermal Barrier Layers on Physicochemical Behavior of Anodic TiO2 Nanotubes

2011

Electrochemical and photo-electrochemical behavior of self-organized TiO2 nanotubes formed in organic solvents have been studied by taking into account the formation of new barrier layers beneath nanotubes either due to the anodic polarization in aqueous solutions or air exposure during high temperature annealing. It has been shown that before annealing, electrochemical and photoelectrochemical answers are dominantly controlled by the physicochemical properties of the anodic barrier layer. Annealing in air at sufficiently high temperatures changes the initial amorphous structure of as-prepared nanotubes and forms a new oxide layer below them due to thermal oxidation of underneath titanium. …

Materials scienceAnnealing (metallurgy)Oxidechemistry.chemical_elementNanotechnologyTiO2 nanotubeThermal barrier coatingBarrier layerchemistry.chemical_compoundPhotoelectrochemistryMaterials ChemistryElectrochemistryPolarization (electrochemistry)Thermal oxidationElectrochemical Impedance MeasurementRenewable Energy Sustainability and the EnvironmentAnodizingSEM.Condensed Matter PhysicsSurfaces Coatings and FilmsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsSettore ING-IND/23 - Chimica Fisica ApplicatachemistryChemical engineeringanodizingTitanium
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