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Electrodes asymmetry

Lowe, A.M., Eren, H. and Bailey, S.l. (2003) Electrochemical noise analysis detection of electrode asymmetry. Corrosion Science, 45, 941-955. [Pg.221]

Effects of the Electrode Asymmetry and Solid-Electrolyte Thickness... [Pg.251]

The simplest and most widely used model to explain the response of organic photovoltaic devices under illumination is a metal-insulaior-metal (MIM) tunnel diode [55] with asymmetrical work-function metal electrodes (see Fig. 15-10). In forward bias, holes from the high work-function metal and electrons from the low work-function metal are injected into the organic semiconductor thin film. Because of the asymmetry of the work-functions for the two different metals, forward bias currents are orders of magnitude larger than reverse bias currents at low voltages. The expansion of the current transport model described above to a carrier generation term was not taken into account until now. [Pg.278]

As already explained, a glass electrode has an asymmetry potential which... [Pg.565]

It has become fairly common to adopt the manufacture of combinations of internal reference electrode and its inner electrolyte such that the (inner) potential at the glass electrode lead matches the (outer) potential at the external reference electrode if the glass electrode has been placed in an aqueous solution of pH 7. In fact, each pH glass electrode (single or combined) has its own iso-pH value or isotherm intersection point ideally it equals 0 mV at pH 7 0.5 according to a DIN standard, as is shown in Fig. 2.11 the asymmetry potential can be easily eliminated by calibration with a pH 7.00 0.02 (at 25° C) buffer solution. [Pg.77]

The cell voltage measurement in itself represents a point of decisive significance, where factors such as temperature of the measurement, and Nemstian behaviour and asymmetry of the electrode play a role together with the reliability and flexibility of the pH/mV meter. Such a meter consists of a null-point or a direct-reading meter. [Pg.86]

The above considerations concern a reversible electrodic process, ox + ne red as instead of 20-100 hz in the sinusoidal technique a fixed frequency of 225 Hz is normally used in the square-wave mode, the chance of irreversibility in the latter becomes greater, which then appears as asymmetry of the bellshaped I curve. Such a phenomenon may occur more especially when the complete i versus E curve is recorded on a single drop, a technique which has appeared useful51 in cases of sufficient reversibility. [Pg.172]

Rectification effects are due to the asymmetry of a current-voltage curve of an electrode system. The asymmetry of these curves may arise from the intrinsic asymmetry of the charge transfer reaction or from the extraneous asymmetry produced by inequalities in mass... [Pg.178]

To avoid having different-sized Schottky barriers at the two interfaces, the same metal (or metals with almost the same work functions) should be used for both electrodes. For example, the different work functions of Pt and Mg made studies of glass I Pt I molecule I Mg I Ag sandwiches hard to interpret [34]. In that case, Mg probably reacted with the end of the molecule containing the strong acceptor TCNQ to form a TCNQ-salt Schottky barrier that dominated the electrical asymmetry [34], With a different molecule lacking TCNQ, the dominating Schottky barrier effect was eliminated [35, 36],... [Pg.43]


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