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Corrosion of Titanium Electrode Used for Solar Saline Electroflotation

Materials 2023 9 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Felipe M. Galleguillos Madrid, Felipe M. Galleguillos Madrid, María P. Arancibia-Bravo, Jonathan Cisterna, Álvaro Soliz, Sebastián Salazar-Avalos, B. Guevara, B. Guevara, Felipe Araya Sepúlveda, Felipe Araya Sepúlveda, Luis Cáceres

Summary

This paper is not relevant to microplastics; it examines corrosion behavior of titanium electrodes used in solar-powered saline electroflotation water treatment systems.

The solar electroflotation (EF) processes using saline electrolytes are today one of the great challenges for the development of electrochemical devices, due to the corrosion problems that are generated during the operation by being in permanent contact with Cl<sup>-</sup> ions. This manuscript discloses the corrosion behavior of titanium electrodes using a superposition model based on mixed potential theory and the evaluation of the superficial performance of the Ti electrodes operated to 4 V/SHE solar electroflotation in contact with a solution of 0.5 M NaCl. Additionally provided is an electrochemical analysis of Ti electrodes regarding HER, ORR, OER, and CER that occur during the solar saline EF process. The non-linear superposition model by mixed potential theory gives electrochemical and corrosion parameters that complement the information published in scientific journals, the corrosion current density and corrosion potential in these conditions is 0.069 A/m<sup>2</sup> and -7.27 mV, respectively. The formation of TiO<sub>2</sub> and TiOCl on the anode electrode was visualized, resulting in a reduction of its weight loss of the anode electrode.

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