Electrochemical Species
Electrochemical species are used to describe the electrically charged components of a gaseous or liquid mixture. They describe the ionized electrolytes within a non-ionized solvent or the ions that exist within a plasma.
Electrolytic Solutions
According to Newman [834], electrolytes can be described as either ideal or dilute solutions, moderately dilute solutions, and concentrated solutions.
Transport mechanisms
Electrochemical species are transported by three dominant transport mechanisms: advection, diffusion, and migration (sometimes also referred to as drift flux). While advection describes transport that is induced by velocities, diffusion describes the transport that is due to gradients in species concentrations. Migration, or drift flux, describes transport that is due to electric potential gradients, and is often related to the concept of transference. While in general all three transport mechanisms occur simultaneously, many systems lend themselves to simplifications which ease the numerical solution process. Also, these transport models can be described using different methodologies.
The electric potentials that are necessary to describe migration fluxes are determined using Eqn. (4237). In general, the frequency of many electrochemical and plasma currents is sufficiently low such that magnetic effects can be ignored and the electrostatic potential model Eqn. (4272) can be used. Furthermore, many systems that require electroneutral mixtures allow for an incompressible description in the evolution equation for electric potential, making use of Ohm's law. For these cases, the electrodynamic potential model Eqn. (4277) can be used.
In any case, Simcenter STAR-CCM+ lets you set the physical coupling between electrochemical species and electric potential.