Hi Ken,

I was cleaning the electrodes after putting them through the abuse of 
dealing with cabbage juice. They seemed to clean fine with isoprope and 
H2O2.

I looked at the darker electrodes under a 40X zoom microscope, and 
noticed something funny. The surface was covered with tiny pits, but a 
large portion was in the form of shiny islands. I assume the pits mean 
silver is being liberated from those places, but why do the other areas 
remain higher and shiny?
 
In calculating the current density, I assume the current is uniform over 
the entire surface of the electrode. But now it seems that only 50% or so 
of the surface is active.

What would it take to make the entire surface active?

Best Regards,

Mike Monett


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