Cathodic corrosion
Cathodic corrosion is a relatively unknown phenomenon that can severely etch metallic electrodes at cathodic (negative) potentials. In spite of these remarkable changes that are caused by cathodic corrosion, the phenomenon is stil not fully understood. Cathodic corrosion is therefore the focus of th...
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Format: | Dissertation |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Cathodic corrosion is a relatively unknown phenomenon that can severely
etch metallic electrodes at cathodic (negative) potentials. In spite of these
remarkable changes that are caused by cathodic corrosion, the phenomenon is
stil not fully understood. Cathodic corrosion is therefore the focus of this PhD
thesis.
The first three experimental chapters of the thesis focus on
characterizing platinum, rhodium and gold electrodes before and after cathodic
corrosion in a variety of working solutions. In doing so, these chapters
establish surprisingly mild corrosion onset potentials and reveal an etching
anistropy that depends on the cation in the working solution. Additional
density functional theory calculations suggest a similarly significant role for
adsorbed hydrogen. These result suggest the existence of ternary metal hydrides
during cathodic corrosion. The role of hydrides is further studied in the
fourth experimental chapter through X-ray absorption spectroscopy.
These four fundamental chapters are followed by two more applied
chapters. The first of these tailors the activity of a platinum single crystal
towards oxygen reduction, by using cathodic corrosion. The second applied
chapter uses cathodic corrosion to create and thoroughly characterize alloyed
nanoparticles.
Combined, these fundamental and applied chapters provide valuable new
information towards understanding and applying cathodic corrosion. |
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