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Article

The Electrochemical Reduction Mechanism of ZnFe2O4 in NaCl-CaCl2 Melts

College of Metallurgy and Energy, North China University of Science and Technology, Tangshan 063210, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Crystals 2021, 11(8), 925; https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst11080925
Submission received: 20 July 2021 / Revised: 3 August 2021 / Accepted: 5 August 2021 / Published: 9 August 2021
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Metallurgical Slag)

Abstract

:
The electrochemical reduction process of ZnFe2O4 in NaCl-CaCl2 melts was studied. Thermodynamic analysis shows that the reduction process of ZnFe2O4 is carried out in multiple steps, and it is difficult to reduce Fe3+ to Fe in one step. Electrochemical tests revealed that the reduction process of ZnFe2O4 includes three steps: First, Fe3+ is reduced to Fe in two steps, then Zn2+ is reduced to Zn in one step. The reduction of Fe3+ on the Mo electrode is a reversible process controlled by diffusion, while the reduction of Zn2+ is an irreversible process controlled by diffusion. The influence of electrolysis voltage and temperature on the process of electric deoxidation has also been studied. It is indicated that properly increasing the temperature is conducive to the diffusion of oxygen ions, thereby increasing the deoxidation rate. With the gradual increase of voltage, the reduction process of ZnFe2O4 is ZnFe2O4 → FeO + ZnO → Fe + ZnO → Fe + Zn.

1. Introduction

Lots of solid slag containing ZnFe2O4 are inevitably produced in the process of zinc metallurgy [1,2]. ZnFe2O4 can cause a low zinc leaching rate in zinc hydrometallurgy. The massive accumulation of these solid residues also causes serious waste of resources and pollution to the air and soil [3]. Therefore, ZnFe2O4 in the waste can not only be reused as a resource, but is significant for environmental protection.
In order to obtain zinc and iron, ZnFe2O4 is subjected to zinc-iron separation by electro-deoxidation in melts [4,5]. This process can realize the reduction and extraction of two metals from the waste residue. Moreover, when preparing target products with high cost, high melting point, and difficult to shape, this process can effectively reduce the difficulty of preparation. Because of the electrolysis process carried out in the solid oxide, even if the melting point of the two metals in the product is quite different, the desired alloy can still be prepared [6]. In addition, the operation method is convenient and the equipment is easy, the production time is short, and the equipment is reduced. At present, the process can prepare a lot of products in the laboratory stage, but more research is needed to produce them on a large scale. Thermodynamic analysis and electrochemical testing methods are applied to explore the electrochemical mechanism of zinc and iron separation in melts. The reduction process of melts electrolysis ZnFe2O4 is studied.

2. Experimental

This experiment used NaCl-CaCl2 melts, the reason is the theoretical decomposition voltage of this system is relatively high, the theoretical decomposition voltage of NaCl is −3.24 V, and the CaCl2 is −3.29 V. The system has good conductivity, which is conducive to the progress of electrolytic deoxidation. The eutectic temperature is approximately 500 °C and below the experimental temperature [7].

2.1. Experimental Materials

The NaCl, CaCl2 and ZnFe2O4 are analytically pure. The ratio of NaCl and CaCl2 was 1:1. The reagents were dried at 200 °C for 8 h using DZF-6050 electric vacuum drying oven and cooled down to room temperature.

2.2. Experimental Method

2.2.1. Electrochemical Experiment

The CHI660E electrochemical workstation was used for experimental testing, and the reduction mechanism of ZnFe2O4 was analyzed by cyclic voltammetry (CV), square wave voltammetry (SWV), and open circuit potential (OCPT). The experiment used a three-electrode system, the working electrode was Mo wire (Φ0.5 mm) which was coated by ZnFe2O4 powder 3 g of ZnFe2O4 powders are added to 5 mL of alcohol to make a suspension, then immerse the Mo wire in the suspension for 15 min; A Ag/Ag+ reference electrode was prepared by filling an aluminum silicate tube (Φ5 mm) with a molar ratio of NaCl: CaCl2: AgCl = 46: 50: 4 and silver wire (Φ0.5 mm, 99.99%); High-purity graphite flakes with good conductivity (99.99%, 80 mm × 20 mm × 5 mm) was polished with sandpaper, cleaned and dried with alcohol, a nickel wire is used to connect the graphite and flakes with Φ5 mm stainless steel rod as anode. Three-electrode system diagram is shown in Figure 1. All experiments were carried out under high purity argon (>99.999%).
The electrolyte was composed of CaCl2 and NaCl. According to n (CaCl2): n (NaCl) = 1:1 prepare 200 g. It was well mixed into the corundum crucible [8,9,10] and put the crucible into the tubular resistance heating furnace. Raised the temperature to 800 °C at 8 °C·min−1, keep constant temperature for 1 h. Heating process under the protection of high-purity argon gas (>99.99%). The three electrodes are put into NaCl-CaCl2 melts (the cathode is immersed in the melts depth of 2 mm, the anode is immersed in the meltsdepth of 20 mm), the electrochemical reduction behavior of ZnFe2O4 on the Mo working electrode is measured, and the reversibility of the reduction process and the number of transferred electrons are measured analyze.

2.2.2. ZnFe2O4 Electrolysis Experiment

The electrolysis experiment is used a two-electrode system, and the GWINSTEK PSM-3004 DC power supply is used to carry out the constant cell pressure electrolysis experiment. The cathode was prepared by grinding ZnFe2O4 powder and pressed it under a pressure of 200 MPa to form a ZnFe2O4 cylindrical sheet with diameter of 15 mm, thickness of 3 mm and weight of 1.2 g, which was placed in a tubular resistance furnace and sintered at 800 °C for 5 h to obtain sufficient mechanical strength. After cooling, it was wrapped with stainless steel mesh and connected with an iron rod to form a wire collector. The preparation of graphite anode is the same as the electrochemical test experiment.
The sample was slowly cooled with argon gas to 25 °C after the end of electrolysis, and the electrolysis product was ultrasonically washed in a beaker containing alcohol for 30 min. Characterization of the sample was analyzed by X-ray diffraction spectroscopy (XRD, X-ray 6000 with Cu Kα1 radiation λ = 1.5405 Å), scanning electron microscopy (SEM, JEM-2800F) and energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDX, EDAX Genesis 7000).
The schematic diagram of the electrode and the electrolysis device are shown in Figure 2.

3. Results and Discussion

3.1. The Calculation of Decomposition Voltage and Oxygen Partial Pressure of ZnFe2O4

The theoretical decomposition voltage EΘ of ZnFe2O4 was calculated by Formula (1) [11].
ΔGΘ = −nFEΘ
where ΔGΘ (kJ·mol−1) is the standard Gibbs free energy; n is the number of exchanged electrons; F (96485C·mol−1) is the Faraday’s constant.
Lg P O 2 was calculated by Formula (2) to analyze the difficulty of ZnFe2O4 reduction in stages.
Δ G Θ = 2.303 R T lg P O 2
where ΔGΘ (kJ·mol−1) is the standard Gibbs free energy; R (8.314 J·mol−1·K−1) is the molar gas constant; T (K) is the temperature; lg P O 2 is the oxygen partial pressure.
The more positive the theoretical reduction voltage of the metal, the easier it will be reduced. It can be seen from Figure 3a that the first reaction is 2ZnFe2O4 = 4FeO + 2ZnO + O2 (g), the reduction products are mainly FeO and ZnO. Then, 2FeO = 2Fe + O2 (g) and 2ZnO = 2Zn + O2 (g) are occurred successively. Therefore, the reduction process of Fe in ZnFe2O4 is carried out in steps.
Figure 3b shows that the reaction ZnFe2O4 = 2Fe + ZnO + 1.5O2 (g) has the lowest oxygen partial pressure, compared with stepwise reduction to Fe from ZnFe2O4, the conditions of one-step are more complicated. Therefore, under a certain oxygen partial pressure, ZnFe2O4 should first be reduced to FeO, then the reaction of FeO to Fe and ZnO to Zn are carried out successively.
The reduction process of ZnFe2O4 is carried out by multiple steps, which provides the basis for the following electrochemical test analysis and electro-deoxidation experiment.

3.2. Electrochemical Analysis of ZnFe2O4 in Melts

3.2.1. Cyclic Voltammetry

The reduction mechanism of ZnFe2O4 in NaCl-CaCl2 melts was studied by CV, which was shown in Figure 4. Figure 4a is comparison chart of CV without and with ZnFe2O4, scan rate was 0.3 V·s−1. The peak D and peak D shown by the dotted line were the oxidation and reduction processes of Na, and the peak E was the oxidation of chlorine inos [12].
In the electric potential range between −2.1 V and 0.3 V, Mo electrode coated with ZnFe2O4 powder, CV curves at different scan rates were shown in Figure 4b. Peak A (−0.7 V), Peak B (−0.9 V) and Peak C (−1.7 V) represent the three reduction processes, the oxidation peak A′ and peak B′ corresponding to the reduction peak A and peak B. The Epc of peak A and peak B did not shift significantly with the increase of scanning speed, while the Epc of peak C shifted. Therefore, it could be seen that peak A and peak B were reversible reaction processes [13,14], and peak C was an irreversible reaction process [15,16]. The relationship between ipc ~ v1/2 was calculated by the data of peak A, peak B and peak C as shown in Figure 5. The linear relationship between ipc and v1/2 indicated that the electrochemical reactions of peak A, peak B, and peak C were all diffusion-controlled reactions [12,17,18].
The number of exchanged electrons in the reduction reaction of peak A and peak B can be calculated by Formula (3) [13,14].
EpcEpc/2 = −0.77(RT/nF)
where Epc (V) is the cathodic peak potential; Epc/2 (V) is the half-peak potential; n is the number of exchanged electrons; F(96485C·mol−1) is the Faraday’s constant; R(8.314 J·mol−1·K−1) is the molar gas constant; T(1073 K) is the temperature.
The average value of EpcEpc/2 under different scanning speeds of peak A was −0.05538 V, the n value was 1.28 (≈1) for peak A. The average value of EpcEpc/2 under different scanning speeds of peak B was −0.04 V, the n value was 1.78 (≈2) for peak B. Therefore, peak C was the reduction of Zn, ZnFe2O4 undergoes three-step reduction on the Mo electrode.

3.2.2. Square Wave Voltammetry and Open Circuit Potential

SWV and OCPT were used to study the electrochemical reduction behavior of ZnFe2O4 deoxidation on the Mo electrode in NaCl-CaCl2 melts, the experimental data is shown in Figure 6.
Three obvious reduction peak A (−0.62 V), peak B (−0.86 V) and peak C (−1.67 V) appeared on the curves in Figure 6a. Combining with CV, the peak A and peak B correspond to the two-step reduction reaction of Fe3+ on the Mo electrode, peak C was a one-step reduction of Zn2+. The stepwise reduction behavior of Fe3+ was studied by OCPT measurements, as shown in Figure 6b. An obvious platform appeared at −0.85 V, which was corresponding to the reaction of Fe3+ → Fe2+. Another platform appeared near −0.94 V, which was the reaction of Fe2+ → Fe.
For the reversible reaction of diffusion control, the relationship between ipc and f1/2 can be calculated using Formula (4).
i p c = 031 π 1 / 2 R 1 T 1 A C 0 D 1 / 2 n 2 F 2 Δ E f 1 / 2
where ipc(A) is the cathodic peak current; A(cm2) is the area of electrode; C0(mol·cm−3) is the molar concentration of electroactive species; D(cm3·s−1) is the diffusion coefficient of electroactive species; Δ E (V) is the potential amplitude; f1/2 is the square root of the formula.
Theoretically, the linear relationship between ipc and f1/2 should pass through the origin [19,20,21]. However, some studies had found that the straight line fitted by the experimental data points will be shifted. There are two main reasons [22,23]. On the one hand, the electrode reaction will be accompanied by some other reaction processes. When fitting the experimental data points to a straight line, it will result in a small positive intercept. It cannot be denied that the process is affected by diffusion control due to the presence of a positive intercept. On the other hand, there is a certain experimental error. In order to reduce the error, the origin and experimental data points were put together to fit a straight line. Some researchers had also adopted this method [24,25,26].
It could be seen from Figure 7, the Epc of peak A and peak B did not shift significantly, which further indicates that peak A and peak B were reversible reactions.
Because of other reaction processes and experimental errors, the experimental data of peak current density (including and excluding the origin) were fitted in this study [24], as shown in Figure 7. The ratio of the diffusion coefficients can be obtained from the slope of the linear fit. D1/D2 of peak A = 0.5715, D1/D2 of peak B = 1.393, D1/D2 of peak C = 0.8368. There was a little difference between the values of D1 & D2 which was in the same magnitude. Therefore, the number of exchanged electrons of ZnFe2O4 can be calculated according to the Formula (5) [27].
W1/2 = 3.52RT/nF
where W1/2(V) is the half-peak width.
The n value was 1.41 (≈1) for peak A, 2.04(≈2) for peak B, and 1.55 (≈2) for peak C. The calculation result was the same as the CV. Therefore, the step-reduction process of ZnFe2O4 is ZnFe2O4 → FeO + ZnO → Fe + ZnO → Fe + Zn.

3.3. The Electrolysis of ZnFe2O4 in Melts

3.3.1. Product Analysis under Different Electrolytic Voltages

According to the above electrochemical tests, the reduction process of Fe3+ in ZnFe2O4 was a two-step reduction, and the reduction process of Zn2+ was a one-step reduction. The melts temperature was 800 °C and different electrolysis voltages (0.6 V, 0.8 V, 1.0 V, 1.2 V, 1.6 V, 1.8 V) were used.
It can be seen from Figure 8 that in the voltage range of 0.6 V~1 V, the main products were FeO and ZnO, which corresponds to the first reduction reaction of ZnFe2O4. The crystal structure of ZnO had changed at 1 V, the structure of cubic sphalerite (a = 0.428 nm) gradually changed to hexagonal red zincite (a = 0.325 nm, b = 0.521 nm) [28].
According to XRD at 1.2 V, the main substance of metal shell was iron, the internal components were mainly FeO and ZnO, as shown in Figure 9a. Therefore, when the electrolysis voltage was 1.2 V, the reduction reactions of ZnFe2O4 from outside to inside were ZnFe2O4 → FeO → Fe. The product was a dense dark brown hard solid at 1.6 V, as shown in Figure 9b. It can be observed that there was a little black irregular solid embedded in the metal shell inside the product, the product obtained by the 1.6 V was mainly Fe and ZnO. In the voltage range of 1.2 V~1.6 V, the same reaction occurs at different electrolytic voltages, but the morphology of the products differs greatly. Electrolysis first occurs on the surface of massive ZnFe2O4, forming a three-phase interface of melts, stainless steel mesh and ZnFe2O4. While the reaction proceeds, the three-phase interface expands from the surface to the inside, and oxygen ions were precipitated, forming a new three-phase interface of melts, metal and solid oxygen-containing compound [29,30,31].
Figure 8 shows that the main product at 1.8 V was Fe. It indicated that the reduction reaction were ZnFe2O4 → FeO → Fe and ZnO → Zn. Figure 10 shows the SEM and EDS images of the cathode product at 1.8 V. It can be seen that the particle size of the product was uniform. Fe atoms formed by the reduction of Fe3+ aggregate to form crystal nuclei with crystal structure, the crystal particles continue to grow with the reduction process to form metallic Fe with a certain particle size, and the Fe grains form a loose and porous structure during the growth process. According to EDS analysis, the atomic percentages of Fe and Zn were 95.19% and 0.86% respectively, the atomic percentage of O was 3.95%. It indicated that a good deoxidation effect can be achieved at 1.8 V after 8 h of electrolysis. The driving force of electrical deoxidation increases with increasing voltage [32], and the reduction of Fe3+ and Zn2+ is easier.

3.3.2. Zinc Behavior during the Electrolysis of ZnFe2O4

There was no Zn detected in the product at 1.8 V, because the experimental temperature (800 °C) was closed to the boiling temperature of Zn (907 °C), and Zn has a significant vapor pressure at a temperature below the boiling point [33]. If zinc was reduced, a small part of the Zn had sunk to the bottom of the melts. A greater part of it would become zinc vapor volatilization, so the content of zinc in the product was less.
In order to study the behavior of Zn during electrolysis, a method will be adopted [34]. The ZnFe2O4 powder was placed in a small graphite crucible and electrically deoxidized for collecting the Zn, as shown in Figure 11a. After the electrical deoxidation was over, the product was taken out and cleaned, and the bottom of the product was detected by XRD. Figure 11b is the XRD analysis results, in addition to Zn, the presence of ZnO was also detected.

3.3.3. Product Analysis at Different Electrolytic Temperatures

When the temperature is the only variable, the diffusion rate of oxygen ions is mainly affected by the temperature, and the changed temperature would also affect the viscosity and conductivity of the melts. Therefore, the temperature of the melts in the electrolysis process is an important parameter [35], which would affect the deoxidation rate and deoxidation effect.
Figure 12 and Figure 13 are the XRD & SEM of the electrolytic products, which show that the main products were Fe and ZnO at 700 °C, the ZnO and Fe particles were bound to each other to form a relatively dense structure, indicating that the deoxidation of ZnFe2O4 was not complete. At 750 °C and 800 °C, the products were Fe. At 800 °C, the diffraction peak of XRD was sharper, indicating that the crystalline state of iron was better and Fe particle size increases. Figure 13 shows that the product had a larger particle size and pore spacing at 800 °C, which is more conducive to deoxidation. According to EDS spectrum analysis, the change of each element content with increasing temperature was shown in Figure 14, the atomic percentage of Fe was 95.19% at 800 °C, which had a lower oxygen content and zinc content than 86.55% at 750 °C. Therefore, the deoxidation effect is better at 800 °C. Within a suitable temperature range, as the temperature increases, the activation energy and diffusion coefficient are greater, and the viscosity of melts can be reduced, thereby increasing the reaction rate [36].

4. Conclusions

(1)
The electrochemical reduction process of ZnFe2O4 on the Mo electrode is a three-step reduction: ZnFe2O4 → FeO + ZnO → Fe + ZnO → Fe + Zn. Fe3+ → Fe2+ → Fe are reversible reduction processes controlled by diffusion, and Zn2+ → Zn is an irreversible reduction process controlled by diffusion.
(2)
The surface of the deoxidized product has high crystallinity at 1.8 V electrolysis for 8 h. The lower content of Zn and O indicates that the deoxidation effect is better.
(3)
Electrolysis voltage is the driving force for electro-deoxidation, ZnFe2O4 is reduced to FeO and ZnO during the voltage of 0.6 V~1 V, then FeO is reduced to Fe at 1.2 V~1.6 V, when the electrolysis voltage is 1.8 V, ZnO is also reduced to Zn. The increase of temperature is beneficial to the diffusion of oxygen ions, the deoxidation rate is accelerated and the occurrence of side reactions can be reduced.
(4)
Electrolysis experiments also verified the stepwise reduction of ZnFe2O4. The reduction of ZnFe2O4 is achieved by electrolysis at 800 °C and 1.8 V for 8 h.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, C.L. and H.L.; data curation, J.L.; writing—original draft preparation, H.Y. and S.Z.; writing—review and editing, W.C.; visualization, L.W. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China, grant number 51874141.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Three-electrode system diagram.
Figure 1. Three-electrode system diagram.
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Figure 2. Physical picture of electrode and schematic diagram of electrolysis device.
Figure 2. Physical picture of electrode and schematic diagram of electrolysis device.
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Figure 3. (a) The relationship between the theoretical decomposition voltage and temperature of ZnFe2O4, (b) the relationship between the oxygen partial pressure and temperature of ZnFe2O4.
Figure 3. (a) The relationship between the theoretical decomposition voltage and temperature of ZnFe2O4, (b) the relationship between the oxygen partial pressure and temperature of ZnFe2O4.
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Figure 4. CV curves on Mo electrode at 800 °C (a) a scan rate of 0.3 V·s−1 and (b) with different scanning rates (0.1 V·s−1~0.3 V·s−1).
Figure 4. CV curves on Mo electrode at 800 °C (a) a scan rate of 0.3 V·s−1 and (b) with different scanning rates (0.1 V·s−1~0.3 V·s−1).
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Figure 5. ZnFe2O4 coated Mo electrode ipc and v1/2 relationship curve.
Figure 5. ZnFe2O4 coated Mo electrode ipc and v1/2 relationship curve.
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Figure 6. (a) SWV curves and (b) OCPT curve on Mo electrode (f: 4~10 Hz, T = 800 °C).
Figure 6. (a) SWV curves and (b) OCPT curve on Mo electrode (f: 4~10 Hz, T = 800 °C).
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Figure 7. Correlation between peak current (ipc), peak potential (Epc) and square root of formula (f1/2) of (a) peak A, (b) peak B and (c) peak C.
Figure 7. Correlation between peak current (ipc), peak potential (Epc) and square root of formula (f1/2) of (a) peak A, (b) peak B and (c) peak C.
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Figure 8. XRD of products at different electrolysis voltages (E = 0.6 V~1.8 V, T = 800 °C, t = 8 h).
Figure 8. XRD of products at different electrolysis voltages (E = 0.6 V~1.8 V, T = 800 °C, t = 8 h).
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Figure 9. Physical of products at (a) 1.2 V and (b) 1.6 V (T = 800 °C, t = 8 h).
Figure 9. Physical of products at (a) 1.2 V and (b) 1.6 V (T = 800 °C, t = 8 h).
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Figure 10. (a) SEM and (b) EDS diagrams of products at 1.8 V electrolysis voltage (T = 800 °C, t = 8 h).
Figure 10. (a) SEM and (b) EDS diagrams of products at 1.8 V electrolysis voltage (T = 800 °C, t = 8 h).
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Figure 11. (a) Experimental physical diagram and (b) XRD analysis diagram (E = 1.8 V, T = 800 °C, t = 8 h).
Figure 11. (a) Experimental physical diagram and (b) XRD analysis diagram (E = 1.8 V, T = 800 °C, t = 8 h).
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Figure 12. XRD patterns of cathode products at different electrolysis temperatures (E = 1.8 V, t = 8 h).
Figure 12. XRD patterns of cathode products at different electrolysis temperatures (E = 1.8 V, t = 8 h).
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Figure 13. SEM of cathode products at (a) 700 °C, (b) 750 °C and (c) 800 °C (E = 1.8 V, t = 8 h).
Figure 13. SEM of cathode products at (a) 700 °C, (b) 750 °C and (c) 800 °C (E = 1.8 V, t = 8 h).
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Figure 14. The relationship between the content of each element as the temperature increases (E = 1.8 V, t = 8 h).
Figure 14. The relationship between the content of each element as the temperature increases (E = 1.8 V, t = 8 h).
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Liu, C.; Liang, J.; Li, H.; Yan, H.; Zheng, S.; Cao, W.; Wang, L. The Electrochemical Reduction Mechanism of ZnFe2O4 in NaCl-CaCl2 Melts. Crystals 2021, 11, 925. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst11080925

AMA Style

Liu C, Liang J, Li H, Yan H, Zheng S, Cao W, Wang L. The Electrochemical Reduction Mechanism of ZnFe2O4 in NaCl-CaCl2 Melts. Crystals. 2021; 11(8):925. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst11080925

Chicago/Turabian Style

Liu, Chang, Jinglong Liang, Hui Li, Hongyan Yan, Sijia Zheng, Weigang Cao, and Le Wang. 2021. "The Electrochemical Reduction Mechanism of ZnFe2O4 in NaCl-CaCl2 Melts" Crystals 11, no. 8: 925. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst11080925

APA Style

Liu, C., Liang, J., Li, H., Yan, H., Zheng, S., Cao, W., & Wang, L. (2021). The Electrochemical Reduction Mechanism of ZnFe2O4 in NaCl-CaCl2 Melts. Crystals, 11(8), 925. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst11080925

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