Issue 14, 2024

Solutal Marangoni force controls lateral motion of electrolytic gas bubbles

Abstract

Electrochemical gas-evolving reactions have been widely used for industrial energy conversion and storage processes. Gas bubbles form frequently at the electrode surface due to a small gas solubility, thereby reducing the effective reaction area and increasing the over-potential and ohmic resistance. However, the growth and motion mechanisms for tiny gas bubbles on the electrode remains elusive. Combining molecular dynamics (MD) and fluid dynamics simulations (CFD), we show that there exists a lateral solutal Marangoni force originating from an asymmetric distribution of dissolved gas near the bubble. Both MD and CFD simulations deliver a similar magnitude of the Marangoni force of ∼0.01 nN acting on the bubble. We demonstrate that this force may lead to lateral bubble oscillations and analyze the phenomenon of dynamic self-pinning of bubbles at the electrode boundary.

Graphical abstract: Solutal Marangoni force controls lateral motion of electrolytic gas bubbles

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Dec 2023
Accepted
18 Jan 2024
First published
06 Feb 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2024,20, 3097-3106

Solutal Marangoni force controls lateral motion of electrolytic gas bubbles

H. Zhang, Y. Ma, M. Huang, G. Mutschke and X. Zhang, Soft Matter, 2024, 20, 3097 DOI: 10.1039/D3SM01646C

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