Diffuse-Charge Dynamics in Electrochemical Systems
Martin Z. Bazant (MIT), Katsuyo Thornton (Northwestern), and Armand, Ajdari (ESPCI)

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the dynamic response of electrochemical systems to applied voltages, revealing complex nonlinear behaviors, multiple time scales, and effects like bulk concentration gradients and transient space charge.
Contribution
It provides a detailed theoretical analysis of diffuse-charge dynamics in electrochemical systems, including new insights into nonlinear effects and multiple time scales.
Findings
Charging slows down due to nonlinearity and couples to bulk diffusion.
Multiple time scales emerge, including $ au o L^2/D$ for salt adsorption.
Large voltages induce transient space charge and concentration gradients.
Abstract
The response of a model micro-electrochemical system to a time-dependent applied voltage is analyzed. The article begins with a fresh historical review including electrochemistry, colloidal science, and microfluidics. The model problem consists of a symmetric binary electrolyte between parallel-plate, blocking electrodes which suddenly apply a voltage. Compact Stern layers on the electrodes are also taken into account. The Nernst-Planck-Poisson equations are first linearized and solved by Laplace transforms for small voltages, and numerical solutions are obtained for large voltages. The ``weakly nonlinear'' limit of thin double layers is then analyzed by matched asymptotic expansions in the small parameter , where is the screening length and the electrode separation. At leading order, the system initially behaves like an RC circuit with a response…
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