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Journal ArticleDOI

Nickel ferrite as inert anodes in aluminium electrolysis: Part II Material performance and long-term testing

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TLDR
In this article, the behavior of three different compositions based on nickel ferrite,nickel oxide and copper cermets was investigated as anode materials in laboratory electrolysis tests for 50h in a conventional cryolite-based electrolyte.
Abstract
The behaviour of three different compositions based on nickel ferrite–nickel oxide–copper cermets was investigated as anode materials in laboratory electrolysis tests for 50h in a conventional cryolite-based electrolyte. The corrosion of the anodes was assumed to be mass transfer controlled and the transfer of impurities into the electrolyte and subsequently into the cathodically deposited metal was studied. The results indicate that the materials corroded in a controlled manner. Mass transfer coefficients of species from the anode to the electrolyte were of the order of 10−4ms−1 while the mass transfer coefficients for transfer of the species from the electrolyte into the deposited metal were of the order of 10−6ms−1. Nickel exhibited significantly lower mass transfer coefficients than those of iron and copper. The extrapolated corrosion rates of the anode ranged 1.2–2.0 cm year−1, which is acceptable from an industrial perspective. The contamination of the deposited aluminium with respect to Ni and Cu was, however, too high to meet current specifications for commercial grade metal. Post-electrolysis examination of the anodes showed that a reaction layer of approximately 50μm thickness was formed on the anodes. This layer did not contain any metal grains and seemed to prevent preferential corrosion of the metal phase in the underlying cermet.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

On the development of metallic inert anode for molten CaCl2–CaO System

TL;DR: In this article, the Gibbs free energy change of several key anodic reactions including electrostripping of metals, electroformation of metallic oxides, electro-dissolution of metallic oxide as well as oxygen and chlorine evolution was calculated and documented, for the first time, as a reference to develop metallic inert anode in chloride based melts.
Book ChapterDOI

Inert Anodes: An Update

TL;DR: In this article, the results of tests on anodes made of ferrites (Ni, Co and Zn) alone or in combination with nickel oxide and copper leading to the final composition Ni1-x-yFe2-xMyO4, where M is zinc and/or cobalt, x is from 0 to 0.5 and y is from
Journal ArticleDOI

Anodic behaviour of oxidised Ni–Fe alloys in cryolite–alumina melts

TL;DR: In this article, binary Ni-Fe alloys of various compositions were subjected to short-term galvanostatic electrolysis in a cryolite-alumina bath at 960°C.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cell operation and metal purity challenges for the use of inert anodes

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a new way to control the alumina concentration of inert anodes, which gives rise to metal contamination, and discussed possible ways to reduce the contamination.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phase evolution of 17(Cu-10Ni)-(NiFe2O4-10NiO) cermet inert anode during aluminum electrolysis

TL;DR: In this article, the impurity contents in the electrolyte and the cathode metal were detected in order to investigate the corrosion characteristic of the elements of Fe, Ni and Cu in the anode.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Nickel ferrite as inert anodes in aluminium electrolysis: Part I Material fabrication and preliminary testing

TL;DR: In this article, denser, sintered samples of nickel ferrite/nickel oxide-copper cermets were produced and characterized, and three compositions were chosen, each with different NiO content.
Book

Light metals 1987

Journal ArticleDOI

An Electrochemical Impedance Study on Cermet Anodes in Alumina‐Saturated Molten Cryolite

TL;DR: In this paper, the electrochemical impedance spectra of NiO-NiFe{sub 2}O{sub 4}-Cu cermet anodes in alumina-saturated molten cryolite at anodic potentials above the decomposition potential of alumina which exhibited a characteristic frequency of about 1 Hz.
ReportDOI

Report on the source of the electrochemical impedance on cermet inert anodes

C.F. Windisch, +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the results of a portion of the studies on anode reaction mechanisms on inert anodes were presented, which indicated that a significant component of the impedance is due to the gas bubbles produced at the anode during electrolysis.
ReportDOI

Final report on the characterization of the film on inert anodes

C.F. Windisch, +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, microscopic and elemental analysis of the reaction zone on polarized cermet inert anodes, over a range of current densities and alumina concentrations, suggest that an alumina film does not form to protect the anode from dissolution.
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