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Anodic

Anodic (from anode) is a term used in electrochemistry to describe processes, electrodes, or conditions associated with the anode, the electrode at which oxidation occurs. In electrochemical cells the designation depends on the cell type: in galvanic (voltaic) cells the anode is the electrode that loses electrons and is the negative terminal; in electrolytic cells, where an external power source drives the reaction, the anode is the positive electrode.

Anodic reactions include the oxidation of species at the anode, such as metal dissolution (M → M^n+ +

Anodic protection is a corrosion-control technique in which a metal structure is maintained at an anodic potential

Anodic processes are contrasted with cathodic ones, where reduction occurs. The adjective anodic is used in

ne−)
or
the
formation
of
oxide
films
on
metals
during
anodic
oxidation.
A
common
applied
example
is
anodizing
aluminum,
a
controlled
electrochemical
process
that
grows
a
thin,
typically
protective
oxide
layer
that
improves
corrosion
resistance
and
enables
coloring.
Similar
anodic
oxidation
is
used
for
titanium,
zinc,
and
other
metals.
by
external
current
to
sustain
a
protective
oxide;
this
approach
is
used
for
pipelines
and
tanks
in
aggressive
environments.
contexts
ranging
from
corrosion
science
to
materials
treatment
and
electroplating.