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Sacrificial anode

 

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Sacrificial anode



 
 
A sacrificial anode, or sacrificial rod, is a metallic anode
Anode

An anode is an electrode through which electric charge flows into a polarized electrical device. Mnemonic: ACID . Electrons flow in the opposite direction to the positive electric current....
 used in cathodic protection
Cathodic protection

Cathodic protection is a technique to control the corrosion of a metal surface by making it work as a cathode of an electrochemical cell. This is achieved by placing in contact with the metal to be protected another more easily corroded metal to act as the anode of the electrochemical cell....
 where it is intended to be dissolved to protect other metallic components.

The more active metal corrodes first (hence the term "sacrificial") and generally must oxidize nearly completely before the less active metal will corrode, thus acting as a barrier against corrosion for the protected metal.

More scientifically, a sacrificial anode can be defined as a metal that is more easily oxidized than the protected metal.






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A sacrificial anode, or sacrificial rod, is a metallic anode
Anode

An anode is an electrode through which electric charge flows into a polarized electrical device. Mnemonic: ACID . Electrons flow in the opposite direction to the positive electric current....
 used in cathodic protection
Cathodic protection

Cathodic protection is a technique to control the corrosion of a metal surface by making it work as a cathode of an electrochemical cell. This is achieved by placing in contact with the metal to be protected another more easily corroded metal to act as the anode of the electrochemical cell....
 where it is intended to be dissolved to protect other metallic components.

The more active metal corrodes first (hence the term "sacrificial") and generally must oxidize nearly completely before the less active metal will corrode, thus acting as a barrier against corrosion for the protected metal.

More scientifically, a sacrificial anode can be defined as a metal that is more easily oxidized than the protected metal. Electrons are stripped from the anode and conducted to the protected metal, which becomes the cathode
Cathode

A cathode is an electrode through which electric charge flows out of a polarized electrical device. Mnemonic: CCD .From an electrochemical point of view, positively charged ion invariably move toward the cathode and/or negatively charged ion move away from it to balance the electrons arriving from external circuitry....
. The cathode is protected from corroding, i.e., oxidizing, because reduction
Redox

Redox describes all chemical reactions in which atoms have their oxidation number changed.This can be either a simple redox process such as the oxidation of carbon to yield carbon dioxide or the reduction of carbon by hydrogen to yield methane , or it can be a complex process such as the oxidation of sugar in the human body through a ser...
 rather than oxidation takes place on its surface.

For example when zinc
Zinc

Zinc is a metallic chemical element with the symbol Zn and atomic number 30. It is a first-row transition metal of the group 12 element of the periodic table....
 and iron
Iron

Iron is a chemical element with the symbol Fe and atomic number 26. Iron is a Group 8 element and period 4 element. Iron is lustrous and silvery in color....
 are electrically connected in the presence of oxygen
Oxygen

Oxygen no O2 produced; 2) O2 produced, but absorbed in oceans & seabed rock; 3) O2 starts to gas out of the oceans, but is absorbed by land surfaces and formation of ozone layer; 4-5) O2 sinks filled and the gas accumulates]]...
 and water, the zinc will lose electrons and go into solution as zinc cations. Electrons released from the zinc atoms flow through metallic conduction to the iron where, on the surface, dissolved oxygen is reduced, by gaining the electrons released by the zinc, to hydroxide anions. Were the zinc not present, the same reduction of oxygen to hydroxide would occur on the iron surface. However in that case the electrons for reduction would be furnished by the iron, thus oxidizing the iron. Therefore, the zinc, when present,is "sacrificed" by being oxidized instead of the iron. The iron is "safe" until all of the zinc has corroded. As zinc is more costly than iron, this method of protecting iron, or steel, would not be cost effective were it not for secondary chemical reactions that form coatings on the iron surface, thus reducing the electrochemical reaction to a trickle and greatly prolonging the life of the zinc anode.

Other examples of protection by use of sacrificial anodes include protection of voids in the glass lining of mild steel water heater tanks via use of magnesium or aluminum alloy anodes, protection of off-shore oil rigs via special alloy anodes for use in salt water, protection of lock gates in water ways, etc.

It is important to understand that for this mode of corrosion protection to function there must be simultaneously present an electron pathway between the anode and the metal to be protected (e.g.,a wire or direct contact) and an ion pathway between the anode and the metal to be protected (e.g., water or moist soil) to form a closed circuit; thus simply bolting a piece of active metal such as zinc to a less- active metal, such as mild steel, in air will not furnish any protection.

See also

  • Reduction potential
    Reduction potential

    Reduction potential is the tendency of a chemical species to acquire electrons and thereby be redox. Each species has its own intrinsic reduction potential; the more positive the potential, the greater the species' affinity for electrons and tendency to be reduced....
  • Standard electrode potential
    Standard electrode potential

    In electrochemistry, the standard electrode potential, abbreviated E? or Eo , is the measure of individual potential of a reversible electrode at standard state, which is with solutes at an effective concentration of 1 moldm-3, and gases at a pressure of 1 bar....
    • Standard electrode potential (data page)
      Standard electrode potential (data page)

      The standard electrode potentials are electrode potentials of half cells at equilibrium. They can be used to determine the potential of an electrochemical cell or galvanic cell, or a position of equilibrium for an electrochemical reaction, or a direction in which an electrochemical reaction can proceed....