Yes, defeating the passivation would be able to account for the 0.1V steady voltage reading.
I meant ,if the aluminium will lose the passivations gradually(during weeks,months),will the voltage reading will be more than steady 0.1V?
Will the voltage increase more and more as the passivation film deplete from the aluminium,while more aluminium will be exposed to the coolant?
and each time that more parts of aluminium will be exposed to the coolant,the voltage reading will be higher:0.2V,0.4V,0.7V...?
Or the voltage reading will be steady 0.1V and not more,even if all the aluminium will be exposed to the coolant with no passivate film?
...I am suggesting that the tiny point where the one nickel electrode meets the aluminium is the voltage source...
I don't understood that.
The nickel electrode is dip into the coolant,it is not meet the aluminium.The coolant is between them.
Maybe i didn't understood your intention?
So why would unpassivated nickel connected to passivated aluminium by an electrolyte have a high capacitance?
It guess that the passivate film on the aluminium act like a dielectric material,while the coolant act as one electrode and the aluminium is the other electrode like the electrolytic capacitors.
And since the electrodes(coolant/aluminium)so close each other(thin passivation layer)it can have high capacitance.
Now,it looks like when i put one probe of the voltmeter into the coolant,it is like i put the probe at one capacitor lead(which connected to an electrolyte)while when the other probe of the voltmeter on the aluminium,it is like i connected that probe to the other lead of the capacitor which has passivated metal.
This action is measuring the capacitor voltage,so,it looks like i measure the voltage between the coolant and the aluminium.
How does the depletion of the passivate film from the aluminium influence the reading voltage at the voltmeter?