Jamali, S., Mills, D. J. and Woodcock, C. P. (2010) Ways of increasing the effectiveness of the electrochemical noise method for assessment of organic coatings on metal. ECS Transactions. 24(1), pp. 115-125. 1938-5862.
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  Abstract:
              The most practically useful arrangement for making Electrochemical Noise Measurements is NOCS. Previously reported work using NOCS suggested that the arrangement had somewhat increased sensitivity to error (drift, spikes etc) in the value of noise resistance (Rn) that was calculated. The current work looked to address this by using an improved data analysis approach using a drift removal programme. Also Rsn (spectral noise resistance at 0.002Hz) has been calculated using either the MEM or FFT methods and compared with (Rn)To investigate possible ambiguity arising from interrogating three separate areas, samples with known values of resistance (high, medium and low) were joined in combinations and Rn measured. It was found that the cell connected to the reference input tended to dominate ie potential noise prevails over current noise. With some refinement, the NOCS method should soon be a practical method for field application. 
            Additional Information:
              Paper originally presented at Fifth International Symposium on Advances in Corrosion Protection by Organic Coatings, 14th - 18th September 2009, Cambridge.
            Subjects:
              
            Creators:
              Jamali, S., Mills, D. J. and Woodcock, C. P.
            Publisher:
              Electrochemical Society
            Faculties, Divisions and Institutes:
              
            Date:
              2010
            Date Type:
              Publication
            Page Range:
              pp. 115-125
            Journal or Publication Title:
              ECS Transactions
            Volume:
              24
            Number:
              1
            Event Title:
              Fifth International Conference on Advances in Corrosion Protection by Organic Coatings
            Event Dates:
              14 - 18 September 2009
            Event Location:
              Cambridge
            Event Type:
              Conference
            Language:
              English
            ISBN:
              1938-5862	
            DOI:
              doi.org/10.1149/1.3453611 
            ISSN:
              1938-5862
            Status:
              Published / Disseminated
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