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High-Throughput Electrochemistry to Study Materials Degradation in Extreme Environments.

Yafei WangBonita GohMichael MooreheadJason Hattrick-SimpersAdrien Couet
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2022)
Electrochemistry has been used for decades to study materials' degradation in situ in corrosive environments, whether it is in room-temperature chemically aggressive solutions containing halide ions or in high-temperature oxidizing media such as pressurized water, liquid metals, or molten salts. Thus, following the recent surge in high-throughput techniques in materials science, it seems quite natural that high-throughput electrochemistry is being considered to study materials' degradation in extreme environments, with the objective to reduce corrosion resistant alloy development time by orders of magnitude and identify complex degradation mechanisms. However, while there has been considerable interest in the development of high-throughput methods for accelerating the discovery of corrosion resistant materials in different environments, these extreme environments propose formidable and exciting challenges for high-throughput electrochemical instrumentation, characterization, and data analysis. It is the objective of this paper to highlight those challenges, to present relatively new efforts to tackle them, and to develop research perspectives on the future of this exciting field. This Perspective is articulated around four main interconnected topics, which must be conjointly considered to enable corrosion resistant alloy design using high-throughput electrochemical methods: (1) high-throughput processing methods to develop material libraries, (2) high-throughput electrochemical methods for corrosion testing and evaluation, (3) high-throughput machine-learning augmented electrochemical data analysis, and (4) high-throughput autonomous electrochemistry representing the future of accelerated electrochemistry research.
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