The driving factors of electro-convective instability in concentration polarization
Isaak Rubinstein, Boris Zaltzman

TL;DR
This paper investigates the key surface and bulk factors, including diffusioosmosis, electroosmosis, and electroconvection, that influence electro-convective instability during concentration polarization in charge-selective interfaces.
Contribution
It identifies and analyzes the major factors affecting electro-convective instability, considering varying interface permselectivity, which was not comprehensively addressed before.
Findings
Imperfect charge-selectivity enables equilibrium ECI.
Multiple factors like diffusioosmosis and bulk EC contribute to ECI.
Analysis covers varying interface permselectivity levels.
Abstract
Ionic current through a charge-selective interface in a binary electrolyte is a basic element of many electrochemical engineering and microfluidic processes. Such current passage is diffusion-limited: it induces a decrease of electrolyte concentration towards the interface (concentration polarization, CP), expressed in the saturation of current upon increasing voltage at some value (limiting current, LC). With further increase of voltage, this saturation breaks down (overlimiting conductance, OLC). In open systems OLC is mediated by a microscale vortical flow which develops as a result of electroconvective instability (ECI) of quiescent CP near LC. Electroconvection (EC) is a flow driven by the electric force acting either upon the space charge of the interfacial EDL (electroosmosis, EO) or the residual space charge of the quasielectroneutral bulk (bulk EC). There are two types of EO,…
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