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Journal ArticleDOI

The morphology and mechanism of formation of porous anodic films on aluminium

J. P. O'Sullivan, +1 more
- 07 Jul 1970 - 
- Vol. 317, Iss: 1531, pp 511-543
TLDR
The morphology of porous anodic oxide films formed on aluminium in phosphoric acid electrolytes at constant current density or voltage, and under changing electrical or electrolytic conditions, has been studied quantitatively by electron microscopy.
Abstract
The morphology of porous anodic oxide films formed on aluminium in phosphoric acid electrolytes at constant current density or voltage, and under changing electrical or electrolytic conditions, has been studied quantitatively by electron microscopy. Replicas from film sections and from both film interfaces have been prepared, as well as transmission micrographs of thin films, produced under accurately defined conditions. During formation at constant current density, pore initiation occurs by the merging of locally thickening oxide regions, which seem related to the substructure of the substrate, and the consequent concentration of current into the residual thin areas. The pores grow in diameter and change in number until the steady-state morphology is established. The film barrier layer thickness has been measured directly for the first time. The steady-state barrier-layer thickness, cell diameter and pore diameter are all observed to be directly proportional to the formation voltage. It becomes evident that the barrier-layer thickness, decided largely by an equilibrium established between oxide formation in the barrier-layer and field-assisted dissolution (probably thermally enhanced) at the pore bases, determines the cell and pore sizes by a simple geometrical mechanism. Anion incorporation into the film and its hydrogen-bonded structure play secondary roles to these factors in determining the actual film morphology, although not its subsequent properties. A consequence of the mechanism is that, at constant current density, relatively non-aggressive electrolytes give thicker barrier layers, larger cells and larger pores next to the barrier layer than aggressive media, although subsequent pore widening at the outer surface of the film by simple chemical dissolution is more severe in aggressive electrolytes.

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Citations
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Self-organized formation of hexagonal pore arrays in anodic alumina

TL;DR: In this article, the conditions for the self-organized formation of ordered hexagonal structures in anodic alumina were investigated for both oxalic and sulfuric acid as an electrolyte.
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Fast fabrication of long-range ordered porous alumina membranes by hard anodization

TL;DR: A new oxalic-acid-based anodization process for long-range ordered alumina membranes that establishes a new self-ordering regime with interpore distances, (Dint)=200–300 nm, allowing 2,500–3,500% faster oxide growth with improved ordering of the nanopores.
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TiO2 nanotubes: Self-organized electrochemical formation, properties and applications

TL;DR: In this article, an overview and review on self-organized TiO2 nanotube layers and other transition metal oxide tubular structures grown by controlled anodic oxidation of a metal substrate is given.
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Highly ordered nanochannel-array architecture in anodic alumina

TL;DR: In this paper, a long-range ordered channel array with dimensions on the order of millimeters with a channel density of 1010 cm−2 was obtained, and the aspect ratio was over 150.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Structural Features of Oxide Coatings on Aluminum

TL;DR: In this paper, the structural features of the porous type of anodic oxide coating applied to aluminum have been investigated with the electron microscope, and formulas were given for calculating the cell size and pore volume of these coatings.
Journal ArticleDOI

The relationships between anodic passivity, brightening and pitting*

TL;DR: In this paper, the formation on the anode surface of very thin oxide films of low ion conductivity is produced by the passage of cations into and through very thin compact solid films, of relatively high cation conductivity which are not plain oxide, but contaminated oxide containing foreign anions.
Journal ArticleDOI

A mechanism for the formation of porous anodic oxide films on aluminium

TL;DR: In this paper, it is shown that in order to account for the formation of porous anodic oxide films on aluminium, it is necessary to assume that oxygen as well as aluminium is capable of diffusing through the compact part of the film.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Initiation of Pores in Anodic Oxide Films Formed on Aluminum in Acid Solutions

TL;DR: In this paper, a mechanism for pore formation in pure aluminum is proposed, which is interpreted as barrier layer formation and pore initiation when the field across the barrier layer has fallen low enough to allow the entry of protons into the film.
Journal ArticleDOI

Determination of Barrier Layer Thickness of Anodic Oxide Coatings

TL;DR: In this article, a novel method is described for measuring the thickness of a barrier type anodic oxide coating or the barrier layer portion of a porous Type Anodic Oxide (PNO) coating.
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