Thursday, December 10, 2009

Further Reading on Contact Glow Discharge Electrolysis

If you want to learn more about Non-Faradaic electrolysis, please see the following. Note that these papers deal with Glow Discharges at the Anode (+), whereas we're doing it at the Cathode (-).

Contact Glow-Discharge Electrolysis
BY A. HICKLING AND M. D. INGRAM
Donnan Laboratories, Liverpool University
Received 4th November, 1963 Published in: Trans. Faraday Soc., Vol. 60 (1964) 783

A Study on the Origin of Nonfaradaic Behavior of Anodic Contact Glow Discharge Electrolysis: The Relationship Between Power Dissipated in Glow Discharges and Nonfaradaic Yields
Susanta K. Sengupta, Rajeshwar Singh, and Ashok K. Srivastava
Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi-221 005, India. From: J. Electrochem. Soc., Vol. 145, No.7, July 1998 (c) The Electrochemical Society, Inc.

Contact glow discharge electrolysis: a study of its chemical yields in aqueous inert-type electrolytes
Susanta K Sengupta and Om Prakash Singh
Department of Chemrstry, Faculty of Science, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasl 221005 (Indra)
(Received 26 January 1993, m revised form 27 August 1993) From: Journal of Electroanalytlcal Chemistry, 369 (1994) 113-120

Contact glow discharge electrolysis: a study of its onset and location
Susanta K. Sengupta and Om Prakash Singh
Department of Chemisrry, Faculty of Science, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi 221005 (India)
(Received 9 May 1990; in revised form 13 September 1990) From: J. Electroanal. Chem., 301 (1991) 189-197


I have uploaded copies of these papers to the "Tech Papers" section of hhoinfo.ning.com