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It is now time for a comprehensive treatise to look at the whole
field of electrochemistry. The present treatise was conceived in
1974, and the earliest invitations to authors for contributions
were made in 1975. The completion of the early been delayed by
various factors. volumes has There has been no attempt to make each
article emphasize the most recent situation at the expense of an
overall statement of the modern view. This treatise is not a
collection of articles from Recent Advances in Electrochemistry or
Modern Aspects of Electrochemistry. It is an attempt at making a
mature statement about the present position in the vast area of
what is best looked at as a new interdisciplinary field. Texas A
& M University J. O'M. Bockris University of Ottawa B. E.
Conway Case Western Reserve University Ernest Yeager Texas A &
M University Ralph E. White Preface to Volume 4 The science of
degradation of materials involves a vast area of science and
technology, the economic importance of which rivals that of any
other clearly defined area affecting the standard of life. The
basis of the corrosion process is the electrochemical
charge-transfer reaction, and the center of the subject of the
degradation of materials is electrochemical material science.
This book had its nucleus in some lectures given by one of us (J.
O'M. B. ) in a course on electrochemistry to students of energy
conversion at the University of Pennsylvania. It was there that he
met a number of people trained in chemistry, physics, biology,
metallurgy, and materials science, all of whom wanted to know
something about electrochemistry. The concept of writing a book
about electrochemistry which could be understood by people with
very varied backgrounds was thereby engendered. The lectures were
recorded and written up by Dr. Klaus Muller as a 293-page
manuscript. At a later stage, A. K. N. R. joined the effort; it was
decided to make a fresh start and to write a much more
comprehensive text. Of methods for direct energy conversion, the
electrochemical one is the most advanced and seems the most likely
to become of considerable practical importance. Thus, conversion to
electrochemically powered trans portation systems appears to be an
important step by means of which the difficulties of air pollution
and the effects of an increasing concentration in the atmosphere of
carbon dioxide may be met. Corrosion is recognized as having an
electrochemical basis. The synthesis of nylon now contains an
important electrochemical stage. Some central biological mechanisms
have been shown to take place by means of electrochemical
reactions. A number of American organizations have recently
recommended greatly increased activity in training and research in
electrochemistry at universities in the United States."
It is now time for a comprehensive treatise to look at the whole
field of electrochemistry. The present treatise was conceived in
1974, and the earliest invitations to authors for contributions
were made in 1975. The completion of the early volumes has been
delayed by various factors. There has been no attempt to make each
article emphasize the most recent situation at the expense of an
overall statement of the modern view. This treatise is not a
collection of articles from Recent Advances in Electrochemistry or
Modern Aspects of Electrochemistry. It is an attempt at making a
mature statement about the present position in the vast area of
what is best looked at as a new interdisciplinary field. Texas A
& M University J. O'M. Bockris University of Ottawa B. E.
Conway Case Western Reserve University Ernest Yeager & M
University Texas A Ralph E. White Preface to Volume 2 This volume
brings together some dozen processes well known to the electro
chemist and treats them according to their various degrees of
importance. The production of hydrogen is one of the more important
processes, particularly with respect to the prospects of a hydrogen
economy. No one would doubt, however, that the most commercially
important electrochemical processes at the present time are the
production of aluminum and of chlorine. Each of these processes has
a separate chapter devoted to it."
This volume contains eight chapters covering a wide range of
topics: ultrasonic vibration potentials, impedance measurements,
photo electrochemical kinetics, chlorine production,
electrochemical behavior of titanium, structural properties of
membranes, bioelec troche mistry, and small-particle effects for
electrocatalysis. Chapter 1, contributed by Zana and Yeager,
discusses the little used but potentially important area of
ultrasonic vibration potentials. The authors review the historical
literature and the associated theoretical equations. They continue
by discussing various aspects of the experimental technique and
close with a review of the existing studies. They conclude by
noting that vibra tion potentials may be useful for determining the
effects of various agents on colloidal suspensions found in such
important industries as paper production. Chapter 2 is a review of
impedance techniques, written by Macdonald and McKubre. The authors
include not only derivations of various impedance functions for
electrochemical systems but also particularly useful discussions of
instrumental methods. The authors close with an interesting claim:
"the distribution of current and potential within a porous battery
or fuel-cell electrode and within 'flow-through' electrodes is best
analyzed in terms of the frequency dispersion of the impedance."
Chapter 3, by Khan and Bockris, is a timely review of photo
electrochemical kinetics and related devices. Their work begins by
reviewing critically important papers on photoelectrochemical
kinetics. They continue by presenting detailed discussions concern
ing the conceptual ideas of the semiconductor-solution interface."
The present decade might be described as one in which man in the
affluent countries is finally realizing that there is a bill to pay
at the end of the feast-a feast at which he has eaten without
inhibition, without knowing there was any need for inhibition. But
now, with the situation fully clear, there is a strange non
plussedness about man's reactions. More oil wells are sought, and
clean-up packages are proposed for the same old cars. There is no
real awareness yet that this is the end of an era, that quite new
technologies have to be built up, and that the time remaining for
this is a shatteringly short 15-30 years. However, there are
sources of energy other than the fossil fuels. Oil and natural gas
will run out (i.e., become too expensive) in any case during the
next two or three decades. There seems little point in waiting
until fuel is actually rationed and cars can only be used to move
from home through smog to work before we change to these new and
clean sources. The time to start the change is now, for there is
much to be done."
Of the societal ills which are recognized as present in the Western
countries during the 1970's, pollution of air and water is among
the first. Whether the breathing of noxious gases acts
biochemically as a source of mental irritation is not yet known.
But it is not in doubt that reduction of the grime, smog, fouled
water, and acrid air would lead to an increase in a feeling of
well-being. Nor is it speculative to state that a reversal of the
present trend to poison the atmosphere and the water is essential
if man is to survive in a technological society. It was partly the
lack of realization of the intrinsic nature of over potential in
electrochemical reactions, * and hence the failure of the early
fuel cells to come up to expectations, which led engineers at the
turn of the century to rely upon the combustion of oil and coal for
the production of energy, with the associated era of increasing
atmospheric pollution."
This volume presents plenary lectures and invited papers that Were
delivered during the Fourth Australian Conference on Electro
chemistry held at The Flinders University of South Australia,
16-20th February 1976. EZeat~oahemi8try fo~ a Futu~e Soaiety was
selected as the Conference theme since the organising committee
were mindful of the rapid change in technological perspective which
the world now faces. We no longer have a prospect of uncontrolled
spontaneous expansion and change as the result of technological
enterprise. Rather, we face the task of attempting to reach a state
of very restricted growth. In the next few decades special accent
must be placed on minimizing pollution and maximizing the efficient
utilization of all available energy sources. With this in mind, the
Conference organisers considered that a conventional
electrochemistry symposium, with its divisions into the various
academic aspects, would be less relevant than a meeting devoted to
aspects of electrochemistry which may underlie parts of the new and
necessary technology for the future state of affairs. What has
actually been achieved by the Conference organisers is a balance
between the ideals expressed and the resulting response from
electrochemists. This response has a bias which reflects the
dominance of certain resources, e.g. metallic minerals, within
Australia. Consequently, the papers included in T~ends in EZeat~o
ahemist~ cover subjects which are of both global and local concern.
In this book, the objective has been to set down a number of
questions, largely numerical problems, to help the student of
electrochemical science. No collection of problems in
electrochemistry has previously been published. The challenge which
faces the authors of such a book is the breadth of the material in
modern electrochemistry, and the diversity of backgrounds and needs
of people who may find a "problems book" in electrochemistry to be
of use. The general intention for Chapters 2-11 has been to give
the first ten questions at a level which can be dealt with by
students who are undergoing instruction in the science of
electrochemistry, but have not yet reached graduate standard in it.
The last two questions in Chapters 2-11 have been chosen at a more
advanced standard, corre sponding to that expected of someone with
knowledge at the level of a Ph.D. degree in electrochemistry."
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