Domain Equations for Tertiary Current Distributions Using the Nernst-Planck Equations and Electroneutrality
The domain equations can be derived by starting with The Nernst-Planck Equations. The material balance equation for the species i in the electrolyte is given by the continuity equation, with a flux given by the Nernst-Planck equation:
where
ci denotes the concentration of species i (SI unit: mol/ m3),
u is, the velocity vector (SI unit: m/s), and
Ji denotes the molar flux relative to the convective transport(see Equation 4-2)
The current balance includes the sum of the flux of all charged species, which yields the current density in the electrolyte:
In the equations above, il denotes the current density vector in the electrolyte. The current balance in the electrolyte then becomes:
where Ql can here be any source or sink. (Ql is typically nonzero for porous electrodes). The current balance and the material balances give one equation per unknown species concentration. However, there is still one more unknown, the electrolyte potential, which requires an additional equation. This equation is the electroneutrality condition, which follows from dimensional analysis of Gauss’s law. In a typical electrolyte solution, it is accurate over lengths greater than a few nanometers:
These formulations are also valid for the pore electrolyte in porous electrodes, except for the transport properties that have to be corrected for porosity and tortuosity. In such cases, the source or sink, Ql, denotes the charge transfer reactions in the porous electrode and/or the non-Faradaic source or sink due to double layer charge and discharge.
The charge transfer reaction can be parameterized by arbitrary functions of the concentrations of the species in the redox couple and the local electric and electrolyte potentials. The most common way to describe the reaction kinetics is to use a Butler-Volmer expression for the charge transfer current density. See The Butler-Volmer Equation.
In the current balance in a porous electrode, the local current density multiplied by the specific surface area of an electrode gives a contribution to the source or sink, Ql, due to electrochemical reactions.