Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Cadmium, anodic, coupling

Subcategory A encompasses the manufacture of all batteries in which cadmium is the reactive anode material. Cadmium anode batteries currently manufactured are based on nickel-cadmium, silver-cadmium, and mercury-cadmium couples (Table 32.1). The manufacture of cadmium anode batteries uses various raw materials, which comprises cadmium or cadmium salts (mainly nitrates and oxides) to produce cell cathodes nickel powder and either nickel or nickel-plated steel screen to make the electrode support structures nylon and polypropylene, for use in manufacturing the cell separators and either sodium or potassium hydroxide, for use as process chemicals and as the cell electrolyte. Cobalt salts may be added to some electrodes. Batteries of this subcategory are predominantly rechargeable and find application in calculators, cell phones, laptops, and other portable electronic devices, in addition to a variety of industrial applications.1-4 A typical example is the nickel-cadmium battery described below. [Pg.1311]

Contact of brass, bronze, copper or the more resistant stainless steels with the 13% Cr steels in sea-water can lead to accelerated corrosion of the latter. Galvanic contact effects on metals coupled to the austenitic types are only slight with brass, bronze and copper, but with cadmium, zinc, aluminium and magnesium alloys, insulation or protective measures are necessary to avoid serious attack on the non-ferrous material. Mild steel and the 13% chromium types are also liable to accelerated attack from contact with the chromium-nickel grades. The austenitic materials do not themselves suffer anodic attack in sea-water from contact with any of the usual materials of construction. [Pg.545]

Cadmium (Cd) anode cells are at present manufactured based on nickel-cadmium, silver-cadmium, and mercury-cadmium couples. Thus wastewater streams from cadmium-based battery industries carry toxic metals cadmium, nickel, silver, and mercury, of which Cd is regarded the most hazardous. It is estimated that globally, manufacturing activities add about 3-10 times more Cd to the atmosphere than from natural resources such as forest fire and volcanic emissions. As a matter of fact, some studies have shown that NiCd batteries contribute almost 80% of cadmium to the environment,4,23 while the atmosphere is contaminated when cadmium is smelted and released as vapor into the atmosphere4 Consequently, terrestrial, aquatic, and atmospheric environments become contaminated with cadmium and remain reservoirs for human cadmium poisoning. [Pg.1321]

Cementation, the process by which a metal is reduced from solution by the dissolution of a less-noble metal, has been used for centuries as a means for extraction of metals from solution, and is probably the oldest of the hydrometallurgical processes. It is also known by other terms such as metal displacement or contract reduction, and is widely used in the recovery of metals such as silver, gold, selenium, cadmium, copper and thallium from solution and the purification of solutions such as those used in the electrowinning of zinc. The electrochemical basis for these reactions has been well established414 and, as in leaching reactions, comprises the anodic dissolution of the less-noble metal coupled to the cathodic reduction of the more-noble metal on the surface of the corroding metals. Therefore, in the well-known and commercially exploited44 cementation of copper from sulfate solution by metallic iron, the reactions are... [Pg.829]

Lead-acid, nickel-iron (Ni-Fe), nickel-cadmium (NiCd), and nickel-metal hydride (NiMH) batteries are the most important examples of batteries with aqueous electrolytes. In lead-acid batteries, the overall electrochemical reaction upon discharge consists of a comproportionation of Pb° and Pb4+ to Pb2+. All nickel-containing battery reactions are based on the same cathodic reduction of Ni3+ to Ni2+, but utilize different anodic reactions providing the electrons. Owing to toxicity and environmental concerns, the formerly widely used Cd°/Cd2+ couple (NiCd cells) has been almost entirely replaced by H/H+, with the hydrogen being stored in a special intermetallic compound (NiMH). [Pg.230]

For chemical monitoring, a list of priority substances has been established that includes metals such as cadmium, lead, and nickel. As far as metals are concerned, voltammetric techniques and more precisely electrochemical stripping analysis has long been recognized as a powerful technique in environmental samples. In particular, anodic stripping voltammetry (ASV) coupled with screen-printed electrodes (SPEs) is a great simplification in the design and operation of on site heavy metal determination in water, for reasons of cost, simplicity, speed, sensitivity, portability and simultaneous multi-analyte capabilities. The wide applications in the field for heavy metal detection were extensively reviewed (Honeychurch and Hart, 2003 Palchetti et al., 2005). [Pg.264]

Electrothermal vaporization isotopa dilution inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ETV-ID-ICP-MS) has been utilized for the analysis of cadmium in fish samples. Radiochemical neutron activation analysis (RNAA), differential pulse anodic stripping voltametry (ASV) and the calorimetric dithizone method may also be employed. The AAS techniques appear to be most sensitive, with cadmium recoveries ranging from 94 to 109% (Koplan, 1999). [Pg.32]

Conmarones s. Benzofurans Coupling s. a. Dimerization -, anodic, on cadmium 7, 849s32 -, mixed s. Cross-coupling -, oxidative, intramolecular 28, 888s32... [Pg.244]

Hwang, T.J., and Jiang, S.J. (1996). Determination of copper, cadmium and lead in biological samples by isotope dilution inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry after online pre-treatment by anodic stripping voltammetry.J. Anal. At. Spectrom. 11(5), 353. [Pg.225]


See other pages where Cadmium, anodic, coupling is mentioned: [Pg.226]    [Pg.448]    [Pg.760]    [Pg.359]    [Pg.125]    [Pg.554]    [Pg.304]    [Pg.393]    [Pg.491]    [Pg.491]    [Pg.784]    [Pg.238]    [Pg.111]    [Pg.82]   


SEARCH



Anodic coupling

Cadmium anode

© 2024 chempedia.info