Conversion of Electrochemical Reaction Components
Once appropriate transport models describe the spatial distributions of species and electrons in a flow field, these potential reaction components can be used to parameterize reactions.
Both electrically neutral and electrically charged species can represent reactants or products in electrochemical reactions or in charge neutral reactions (see Chemical Kinetics, Bulk Ion Chemical Reactions and Sorption).
Electrochemical reactions are strictly heterogeneous—they always involve reactants and products from at least two distinct phases.
In iron corrosion for example, solid iron can react with electrons from the same solid phase to form dissolved iron cations in the adjacent solution phase. Reactions in fuel cells occur at three-phase boundaries. This tendency preferentially also holds true for batteries where electrons are provided from a solid conductive aid phase to convert lithium—that is intercalated in an active material phase—into dissolved lithium cations in an electrolyte phase.
In Simcenter STAR-CCM+, electrochemical reactions are modelled on the two-dimensional surfaces of solid electrodes, however, besides electrochemical reactions, the reactants and products can undergo further reactions of chemical nature within the fluid volume of an electrolyte. The following sections cover both the electrochemical reactions, as well as sorption and bulk chemical reactions of electrochemical species.