Re: CS>Electrode Surface Area

2000-08-01 Thread Ivan Anderson
, so the current density is 0.0018 mA per sq mm. Electrodes have 'hot spots' at sharp edges which draw more current than the rest. Regards, Ivan. - Original Message - From: "blue_eyes" To: Sent: Wednesday, 2 August 2000 10:17 Subject: Re: CS>Electrode Surface

Re: CS>Electrode Surface Area

2000-08-01 Thread blue_eyes
Fellow CS'ers, Of all the responses I received directly (1), there was one that stood out from all the rest. It indicated the total surface area of both electrodes is used to calculate the current density. There was no mention of the reasoning behind the conclusion, so I am still looking for more

Re: CS>Electrode Surface Area

2000-08-01 Thread w8w8
>Greetings Folks! > > >I do not recall anyone mentioning whether they based current >density on 100% of the wetted surface area of both electrodes >or only the wetted surface areas facing each other. > >I tend to think that most of the current is "leaving" or "entering" >the surf

Re: CS>Electrode Surface Area

2000-08-01 Thread Ode Wan Coyote
C. SILVER" Sent: Monday, July 31, 2000 8:19 PM Subject: CS>Electrode Surface Area > Greetings Folks! > > As time has gone on, the subject of current density has come up > now and then and several folks have mentioned what they thought > was the appropriate maximum densit

Re: CS>Electrode Surface Area

2000-07-31 Thread Jeffrey A. Madore
This is a good question. Even with large electrodes, I suspect that the current density is not uniform. Has anyone addressed electrode design? Jeff - Original Message - From: "blue_eyes" To: "C. SILVER" Sent: Monday, July 31, 2000 8:19 PM Subject: CS>

CS>Electrode Surface Area

2000-07-31 Thread blue_eyes
Greetings Folks! As time has gone on, the subject of current density has come up now and then and several folks have mentioned what they thought was the appropriate maximum density for minimum silver size. I do not recall anyone mentioning whether they based current density on 100% of the wetted