| Literature DB >> 30166574 |
Shungo Natsui1, Takuya Sudo2, Takumi Kaneko2, Kazui Tonya2, Daiki Nakajima2, Tatsuya Kikuchi2, Ryosuke O Suzuki2.
Abstract
The molten salt-based direct reduction process for reactive solid metal outperforms traditional pyrometallurgical methods in energy efficiency. However, the simplity and rapidity of this process require a deeper understanding of the interfacial morphology in the vicinity of liquid metal deposited at the cathode. For the first time, here we report the time change of electrode surface on the sub-millisecond/micrometre scale in molten LiCl-CaCl2 at 823 K. When the potential was applied, liquid Li-Ca alloy droplets grew on the electrode, and the black colloidal metal moved on the electrode surface to form a network structure. The unit cell size of the network and the number density of droplets were found to depend on the applied potential. These results will provide important information about the microscale mixing action near the electrode, and accelerate the development of metallothermic reduction of oxides.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30166574 PMCID: PMC6117334 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-31521-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Electrochemical characteristics of the Mo electrode in LiCl-CaCl2 eutectic melt at 823 K (a) Cyclic voltammogram at the scan rate of 10 mV/s, together with representative photographed working electrode(WE) (ϕ1.5 mm) images at different potentials captured using a single-lens reflex digital camera (D810, Nikon Co.) (b) Time change of current density and supplied charge in each potential condition derived by chronoamperometry.
Figure 2Photographs of the electrodeposited melt and black colloidal metal formed on the flat Mo electrode at 823 K. The snapshots correspond to almost the same region. The corresponding current-time curves are represented in Fig. 1b. (In Supplementary Video, we reported the temporal change of the electrode surface at E = −2.55 V.)
Figure 3Morphology of metal droplets electrolytically deposited on flat Mo surface (a) Potential-dependent temporal changes of the droplet number density. The number of droplets in areas of 1.28 × 10−7 m2 was counted using ImageJ, and the average value thereof was calculated (b) Representative coalescence behaviour between electrodeposited droplets (t > 1.0 s, E = −2.55 V).
Figure 4Cell generation mechanism by interfacial tension gradient-induced convection. (a) Schematic diagram of Marangoni convection near electrodes. (b) Length and grow rate of cells in the colloidal network obtained from image analysis. The minimum and maximum diameters of a given cell are denoted respectively as a and b in consideration of the thickness of the network, and the mean cell diameter is given based on multiple cells. t1 is the reference time when the cell was formed.