Weber I, Mallick B, Schild M, Kareth S, Puchta R, van Eldik R (2014)
Publication Type: Journal article
Publication year: 2014
Book Volume: 20
Pages Range: 12091-12103
Journal Issue: 38
Alumina deposition on platinum grading electrodes in high voltage direct current (HVDC) transmission modules is an unsolved problem that has been around for more than three decades. This is due to the unavoidable corrosion of aluminum heat sinks that causes severe damage to electrical power plants and losses in the range of a million Euro range per day in power outage. Simple experiments in a representative HV test setup showed that aluminates at concentrations even below 10-8 molL-1 can deposit on anodes through neutralization by protons produced in de-ionized water (κ≤0.15 μScm-1) at 20-35 kV (8 mA) per electrode. In this otherwise electrolyte-poor aqueous environment, the depositions are formed three orders of magnitude below the critical precipitation concentration at pH 7! In the presence of an inert electrolyte such as TMAT (tetramethylammonium-p-toluenesulfonate), at a concentration level just above that of the total dissolved aluminum, no deposition was observed. Deposition can be also prevented by doping with CO
APA:
Weber, I., Mallick, B., Schild, M., Kareth, S., Puchta, R., & van Eldik, R. (2014). Behavior of highly diluted electrolytes in strong electric fields - Prevention of alumina deposition on grading electrodes in hvdc transmission modules by Co2-induced ph-Control. Chemistry - A European Journal, 20(38), 12091-12103. https://doi.org/10.1002/chem.201400165
MLA:
Weber, Immo, et al. "Behavior of highly diluted electrolytes in strong electric fields - Prevention of alumina deposition on grading electrodes in hvdc transmission modules by Co2-induced ph-Control." Chemistry - A European Journal 20.38 (2014): 12091-12103.
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