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It is very often a simple metal bar (aluminum or magnesium) welded nicely to the hull. It must touch the water level.How do you think this should work?
When ship is still? Or in the ocean?
What is the idea? what are the voltage and current levels involved? can you please be more explicit?Thanks, when ICCP is done, they dont use just a DC power supply to supply the current...they use a train of half sine current pulses....at about 60Hz or so. This is presumably so that fusing is easier , since fuse arcs will extinguish easier when the current periodically goes to zero.
But for my understanding the anode will be destroyed. Ions will be dissolved in water and have to move to the "defective" place and will become a protective metal surface (being recovered).
Your understanding is correct.This makes the least nobal metal to be destroyed and the higher nobal electrode will be plated with the less nobal material. As soon as it is plated both electrodes have the same voltage and the current gets reduced.
So in boilers there are magnesium anodes and the boiler is made of steel.
In case of boiler (water tube type), it is cheaper to use deionised water because magnesium will first consume all the dissolved oxygen (like they used to be used like getters in vacuum tube devices).