I'm trying to explore a phenomenon I don't understand with electrolysis using aluminium electrodes in distilled water. The intent was to look at the effect of the surface oxide layer on the conductivity between the electrodes and the water, compared to other materials which don't have such a layer. I was initially curious as to how aluminium can function as a sacrificial anode when it is covered by an impervious and insoluble oxide layer.
My setup has two aluminium foil electrodes, folded into interleaving concertina shapes to get as much surface area as possible with the minimum gap. Using 100 mV, I measured an initial current spike of around 5 uA, decaying away over about a minute to approaching 200 nA. If I disconnected it for a few seconds and reconnected, this behaviour repeated. Same if I reversed polarity.
I chose 100 mV hoping it would be a level too low to induce chemical changes in the electrodes - and hadn't expected a decay curve like that. So I tried with 10 mV and got exactly the same shape, this time starting at around 800 nA, decaying over around 30 seconds to below 10 nA (the minimum resolution of my measuring equipment).
I am putting together a measurement front-end that will allow me to measure currents with pA resolution, and to try with lower voltages still - but this leads me to some questions.
1. Any ideas what this behaviour might be due to? It is behaving almost like a poor capacitor, except that it can't be - the capacitance would have to be way higher than is possible for those electrodes (I think). I have another hypothesis about ion distribution in the water, the rate of natural dissociation of water and the speed of diffusion of ions, but need to take measurements to a greater precision to test it.
2. How can I get my equipment seriously clean using chemicals available to me as a non-professional? Currently, I am cleaning everything thoroughly in hot water with detergent, then rinsing in tap water, then washing in isopropyl alcohol and finally rinsing in distilled water - doing this to both electrodes and beaker - while wearing latex gloves to avoid skin contamination. But in spite of this, I am measuring a voltage developed between the electrodes - which has to mean some kind of contamination. No point in going to more precision and lower voltages if I can't reduce this obfuscating effect!
3. The voltage developed across the electrodes is higher after running a few trials. I thought 100 mV was below the level that would trigger chemistry in the cell - and 10 mV even more so? The behaviour tells me that some chemistry must be happening, but how? I thought over a volt (1.4?) was necessary before aluminium would interact with the water? And there must be energy required to break bonds between the ions in solution and the water molecules - can 10 mV really provide enough to do that? If I do take this down lower, will there be a voltage at which there really will be no chemistry - in which case, should the current drop to zero, as without chemical interaction, how will the charge carriers (ions) manage to transfer electrons?
At 1V and above there was another weird behaviour, but I'll leave that for the moment lest this post get even longer. I'm trying to get to the bottom of one thing at a time!
I tried a similar experiment, briefly, with copper electrodes - found about three times the current levels and a similar decay curve - but bizarrely, the decay curve was much smaller and went in the opposite direction - was initially low and built up towards a sustained level. That has me even more confused, but I'm parking that one for a bit until I understand more about the behaviour with aluminium.
My apologies if these are daft questions - I'm not really a chemist - but this has me perplexed and fascinated!