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Later the word was used for processes of electrodeposition, which remains a useful and broadly applied technology.
Reproduction made by electrodeposition frequently used in museum displays.
The process used in electroplating is called 'electrodeposition'.
Electrodeposition of all elements simultaneously is a difficult processing problem for a variety of reasons.
This "American edition" has numerous figures illustrating technical procedures for electrodeposition.
Electrometallurgy is the field concerned with the processes of metal electrodeposition.
Most commercial electroplating of cadmium is done by electrodeposition from cyanide baths.
Precursors can also be deposited by electrodeposition.
Electroforming is a metal forming process that forms thin parts through electrodeposition.
The primary electrochemical process which occurs during aqueous electrodeposition is the electrolysis of water.
Faraday devised the laws of chemical electrodeposition of metals from solutions in 1857.
Similar processes of electrodeposition and electrolytic stripping are used to obtain specific metal alloys.
Art was taught from the beginning of the Polytechnic, and included design, weaving, embroidery and electrodeposition.
Because electrodeposition requires conductive electrodes, metal foils are a logical substrate.
Electrodeposition is a common (and remarkably flexible) process, one where thin metal layers are deposited on conducting surfaces.
The electrodeposition is carried out galvanostatically, by applying a current of about 100 A/m for about 30 minutes.
"Environmental Aspects of Electrodeposition."
Electrodeposition may refer to:
In 1862, a British patent (number 3288) was issued for the plating of metal with brass by electrodeposition to obtain a stronger bond to rubber.
It is used as an electrolyte for electrodeposition of thin metallic cadmium coatings on metal to protect against corrosion.
Electrodeposition of elemental layers is similar to the sputtering of elemental layers.
Usually an electrolytic cell (consisting of two electrodes, electrolyte, and external source of current) is used for electrodeposition.
Electrowinning, also called electroextraction, is the electrodeposition of metals from their ores that have been put in solution or liquefied.
Owing to the electrodeposition process, 7% of the material consisted of dissolved phosphorus atoms, and it contained no precipitates.
Chemical removal of exposed (or unexposed) photoresist results in a three-dimensional structure, which can be filled by the electrodeposition of metal.