Mechanism and Kinetics of the Interaction of Activated Aluminum with Water and Aqueous Electrolytes
Raushan Sarmurzina, Galina Boiko, Nina Lyubchenko, Uzakbai Karabalin, Askhat Khasenov, Yelena Panova, Bagdaulet KenzhaliyevThe work is a continuation of studies , focused on the development of fundamental principles of aluminum activation by low-melting metals forming eutectic alloys with fine-grained structure and limited solid solubility. The aim of this work is to investigate the mechanism and kinetics of the interaction of aluminum-based eutectic alloys with water and aqueous electrolytes. Analysis of phase diagrams of binary systems (Al–Ga, Al–In, In–Ga, Al–Sn, Sn–Ga, Al–Zn, Zn–Ga) shows that alloy composition governs surface heterogeneity and reactivity. Ternary and quaternary systems (Al–In–Ga, Al–Sn–Ga, Al–In–Sn–Ga) exhibit enhanced interaction with water due to increased heterogeneity, leading to the formation of numerous microgalvanic couples and accelerated aluminum dissolution. The process is characterized by the stationary potential of aluminum and involves coupled chemical, electrochemical, and topochemical stages described by the Avrami–Erofeev equation, with n ≈ 1.27–2.07. An increase in the In–Ga or In–Sn–Ga fraction reduces the activation energy: 9.1 kcal/mol (82% Al–9% Ga–9% Sn), 11.4 kcal/mol (92% Al–4% Ga–4% In), and 15.5 kcal/mol (91% Al–3% Ga–3% In–3% Sn).