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Ionic current and electrostatics
Posted 4 ago 2017, 18:48 GMT-4 Low-Frequency Electromagnetics, Battery Design, Chemical Reaction Engineering, Electrochemistry Version 5.3 3 Replies
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Thanks in advance for any help that may come from the post!
I'm trying to put together a model to resolve the resulting ionic current between two Ag/AgCl electrodes at fixed potential in a KCl electrolyte. My first approach was to use the electrical currents module to determine the current since I know the conductivity of my electrolyte. However, because future iterations of the model may look at charged surfaces, nanometer scale-lengths, and electrophoretic transport, I'd like to make the model a bit more robust and determine the ionic current by looking at the flux of the ions. As a result, I've tried combining the transport of diluted species and electrostatics physics to get a ion distribution (N-P). My problem lies in that I do not know what physics is best to consume and generate chlorine ions, and therefore produce a current. With the current setup, the chlorine ions concentrate near one electrode.
I understand that there are ways to do this using an electrochemistry approach, but since I am not concerned with the actual physics of the redox reactions at the electrodes, I am hoping there is a simple solution.
Just to rephrase the overall goal: I'm hoping to measure ionic current through a salt water electrolyte, with the current being generated by two electrodes with fixed potential. By tracking ionic flux, I am hoping to have a model that also incorporates things like ionic screening and interaction with charged surfaces.
I'm trying to put together a model to resolve the resulting ionic current between two Ag/AgCl electrodes at fixed potential in a KCl electrolyte. My first approach was to use the electrical currents module to determine the current since I know the conductivity of my electrolyte. However, because future iterations of the model may look at charged surfaces, nanometer scale-lengths, and electrophoretic transport, I'd like to make the model a bit more robust and determine the ionic current by looking at the flux of the ions. As a result, I've tried combining the transport of diluted species and electrostatics physics to get a ion distribution (N-P). My problem lies in that I do not know what physics is best to consume and generate chlorine ions, and therefore produce a current. With the current setup, the chlorine ions concentrate near one electrode.
I understand that there are ways to do this using an electrochemistry approach, but since I am not concerned with the actual physics of the redox reactions at the electrodes, I am hoping there is a simple solution.
Just to rephrase the overall goal: I'm hoping to measure ionic current through a salt water electrolyte, with the current being generated by two electrodes with fixed potential. By tracking ionic flux, I am hoping to have a model that also incorporates things like ionic screening and interaction with charged surfaces.
3 Replies Last Post 9 ago 2017, 07:59 GMT-4