Injection of hydrogen and vacancy-type defects during dissolution of aluminum

Thumbnail Image
Supplemental Files
Date
2005-10-01
Authors
Adhikari, Saikat
Lee, J.
Chen, H.
Jean, Y.
Hebert, Kurt
Major Professor
Advisor
Committee Member
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract

Formation of interfacial nanoscale voids in Al during room-temperature caustic corrosion was characterized by positron annihilation spectroscopy (PAS) and compared with measurements of deuterium absorption using secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS). The hypothesis was investigated that voids are created from vacancy-hydrogen (Vac-H) defects introduced during corrosion. Evidence for both mobile and immobile forms of absorbed hydrogen was obtained, the latter present within distances of 50 nm from the metal-oxide interface, where voids were also found. During corrosion, the immobile hydrogen was found only during discrete 1-2 min intervals of time separated by periods of 1-2 min when it was not present. Model calculations suggested that this transient behavior is consistent with repeated nucleation and dissolution of clusters of Vac-H defects. Only some aspects of the time-dependence of the void concentration from PAS corresponded with that of absorbed hydrogen; the former is believed to be influenced by metallic impurities.

Series Number
Journal Issue
Is Version Of
Versions
Series
Academic or Administrative Unit
Type
article
Comments

The archival version of this work was published in Adhikari, S., Lee, J., Chen, H., Jean, Y.C., Hebert, K.R."Injection of hydrogen and vacancy-type defects during dissolution of aluminum" (2005) ECS Transactions,1 (4), pp. 127-138. doi: 10.1149/1.2215496

Rights Statement
Copyright
Sun Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 2006
Funding
DOI
Supplemental Resources