An update on the experiments described in this thread, and some questions at the end .
I've now set up a more controlled experimental setup to explore this behaviour, and am rehearsing my procedures and software with a couple of aluminium foil electrodes. I intend to fine-tune things based on the results, and then run this again 'properly' with rigid, measured electrodes of various metals.
The experimental setup consists of
- a plastic container sitting in a temperature controlled water bath
two aluminium foil electrodes dangling into distilled water, with roughly 10x10 cm immersed in the water, and about 5-10 mm separation.
- The electrodes are connected in series with a 10K 'current sensing' resistor to a D-to-A convertor, allowing software control of the voltage applied to the electrodes.
- The voltage drop across the resistor is also captured by analog 'input' channels on the same DAQ device, allowing the current through the resistor to be graphed interactively and logged.
The software is set up to run a series of repeated test cycles, each of which applies a voltage alternately in opposite directions, with 'recovery' periods in between when the differential voltage is held to zero (effectively, a short circuit).
Each time a voltage change is made, it is held for around 20 minutes to settle completely, before the next change.
Each cycle is repeated identically five times
Each group of cycles is repeated for a range of voltages, starting at 1.2 mV, and increasing progressively up to 2V.
The whole procedure takes several days to run and (thankfully) runs unattended, while collecting a large dataset.
My first run is still in progress, and initial results appear to show a true capacitance that is independent of voltage (at least, up to 250 mV) and is around 350 uF.
The series resistance is also independent of voltage, at about 5.5 k
The parallel resistance however, changes dramatically over time and/or as the voltage increases. On the first four repetitions at 1 mv (in the case, with five minutes in each direction and five minutes 'rest' time between the changes), the parallel resistances measured rose from an initial 10 k up to 81 k.
A later run at 250 mV shows the same capacitance and series resistance, but a parallel resistance of over 1M
If we assume that this system is made up of two capacitors in series (one for each electrode) with a building layer of aluminium oxide as the dialectric, the each capacitor would have to be around 700 uF, and assuming a dialectric constant of 10 (from wikipedia), the oxide layer would be around 1.2 nm thick.
Guessing from the atomic radii of aluminium and oxygen that the diameter of an oxide molecule might be around 300-350 pm, then there this layer would be around 3-4 molecules thick.
Given that the capacitance does not change over the period being measured, the thickness of this layer must stay about the same, even though its electrical resistance went up by a factor over 100 to over 1 megohm (both electrodes in series - that would be 500k each).
So - some specific questions .
- Do these results make sense? Is that thickness of oxide layer reasonable?
- What happens to the oxide layer to increase its resistance if its thickness doesn't change?
- Is it reasonable that a voltage as low as 1 mV would be enough to cause the layer to change like this? Note that the aluminium was left disconnected in the water for a day before the experiment started.
- Am I right in assuming that aluminium oxide would be the main constituent of the layer? I was wondering whether it might be a mix of aluminium oxide and aluminium hydroxide, given that I'm reversing the polarity every few minutes. But aluminium hydroxide has a much lower dialectric constant (2 as opposed to 10), so if that is part of the layer, the thickness must be less, down to a single molecule or two?
Thoughts/comments?
What I'm doing now, is waiting for this set of tests to complete, and I'm writing a program to analyse and interpret the logged data automatically, rather than having to repeat the tedious manual procedure over and over again!
I'm also tuning the software that runs the tests, and planning what I want to get out of subsequent runs.
Will probably be a little while before I'm ready to start the next set of trials, but a good bit more to get out of these first results yet!