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Helmholtz outer plane

IHP) (the Helmholtz condenser formula is used in connection with it), located at the surface of the layer of Stem adsorbed ions, and an outer Helmholtz plane (OHP), located on the plane of centers of the next layer of ions marking the beginning of the diffuse layer. These planes, marked IHP and OHP in Fig. V-3 are merely planes of average electrical property the actual local potentials, if they could be measured, must vary wildly between locations where there is an adsorbed ion and places where only water resides on the surface. For liquid surfaces, discussed in Section V-7C, the interface will not be smooth due to thermal waves (Section IV-3). Sweeney and co-workers applied gradient theory (see Chapter III) to model the electric double layer and interfacial tension of a hydrocarbon-aqueous electrolyte interface [27]. [Pg.179]

The layer of solvent molecules not directly adjacent to the metal is the closest distance of approach of solvated cations. Since the enthalpy of solvation of cations is nomially substantially larger than that of anions, it is nomially expected that tiiere will be insufBcient energy to strip the cations of their iimer solvation sheaths, and a second imaginary plane can be drawn tlirough the centres of the solvated cations. This second plane is temied the outer Helmholtz plane (OHP). [Pg.586]

The outer Helmholtz plane (OHP) refers to the distance of closest approach of non specifically adsorbed ions, generally cations. The interactions of the ions of the OHP with the surface are not specific and have the character of longer range coulombic interactions. Cations that populate the outer Helmholtz plane are usually solvated and are generally larger in size than the anions. [Pg.510]

F r d ic Current. The double layer is a leaky capacitor because Faradaic current flows around it. This leaky nature can be represented by a voltage-dependent resistance placed in parallel and called the charge-transfer resistance. Basically, the electrochemical reaction at the electrode surface consists of four thermodynamically defined states, two each on either side of a transition state. These are (11) (/) oxidized species beyond the diffuse double layer and n electrons in the electrode and (2) oxidized species within the outer Helmholtz plane and n electrons in the electrode, on one side of the transition state and (J) reduced species within the outer Helmholtz plane and (4) reduced species beyond the diffuse double layer, on the other. [Pg.50]

Fig. 1. The structure of the electrical double layer where Q represents the solvent CD, specifically adsorbed anions 0, anions and (D, cations. The inner Helmholtz plane (IHP) is the center of specifically adsorbed ions. The outer Helmholtz plane (OHP) is the closest point of approach for solvated cations or molecules. O, the corresponding electric potential across the double layer, is also shown. Fig. 1. The structure of the electrical double layer where Q represents the solvent CD, specifically adsorbed anions 0, anions and (D, cations. The inner Helmholtz plane (IHP) is the center of specifically adsorbed ions. The outer Helmholtz plane (OHP) is the closest point of approach for solvated cations or molecules. O, the corresponding electric potential across the double layer, is also shown.
The inner layer (closest to the electrode), known as the inner Helmholtz plane (IHP), contains solvent molecules and specifically adsorbed ions (which are not hilly solvated). It is defined by the locus of points for the specifically adsorbed ions. The next layer, the outer Helmholtz plane (OHP), reflects the imaginary plane passing through the center of solvated ions at then closest approach to the surface. The solvated ions are nonspecifically adsorbed and are attracted to the surface by long-range coulombic forces. Both Helmholtz layers represent the compact layer. Such a compact layer of charges is strongly held by the electrode and can survive even when the electrode is pulled out of the solution. The Helmholtz model does not take into account the thermal motion of ions, which loosens them from the compact layer. [Pg.19]

Grahame introdnced the idea that electrostatic and chemical adsorption of ions are different in character. In the former, the adsorption forces are weak, and the ions are not deformed dnring adsorption and continne to participate in thermal motion. Their distance of closest approach to the electrode surface is called the outer Helmholtz plane (coordinate x, potential /2, charge of the diffuse EDL part When the more intense (and localized) chemical forces are operative, the ions are deformed, undergo partial dehydration, and lose mobility. The centers of the specifically adsorbed ions constituting the charge are at the inner Helmholtz plane with the potential /i and coordinate JCj < Xj. [Pg.153]

Quantitative calculations are beset by a number of difficulties when specific adsorption occurs. Since the ions at the inner Helmholtz plane are localized (contrary to those at the outer Helmholtz plane, which are smeared out ), it is not correct to... [Pg.155]

Reactant concentrations Cyj in the bulk solution, as well as the Galvani potential between the electrode and the bulk solution (which is a constituent term in electrode potential E), appear in kinetic equations such as (6.8). However, the reacting particles are not those in the bulk solution but those close to the electrode surface, near the outer Helmholtz plane when there is no specific adsorption, and near the inner Helmholtz plane when there is specific adsorption. Both the particle concentrations and the potential differ between these regions and the bulk solution. It was first pointed out by Afexander N. Frumkin in 1933 that for this reason, the kinetics of electrochemical reactions should strongly depend on EDL structure at the electrode surface. [Pg.245]

All factors influencing the potentials of the inner or outer Helmholtz plane will also influence the zeta potential. For instance, when, owing to the adsorption of surface-active anions, a positively charged metal surface will, at constant value of electrode potential, be converted to a negatively charged surface (see Fig. 10.3, curve 2), the zeta potential will also become negative. The zeta potential is zero around the point of zero charge, where an ionic edl is absent. [Pg.598]

Figure 4.3 Schematic diagram of the electrochemical metal—aqueous interface, with the electrode, inner layer, diffuse layer, outer Helmholtz plane (OHP), and inner-layer thickness Xji indicated. Figure 4.3 Schematic diagram of the electrochemical metal—aqueous interface, with the electrode, inner layer, diffuse layer, outer Helmholtz plane (OHP), and inner-layer thickness Xji indicated.
FIG. 10 Schematic representation of the proposed surface model (a) the concentration and (b) the electrical potential profiles at the interface of the membrane and aqueous sample solution, x = 0 and 0 are the positions of ions in the planes of closest approach (outer Helmholtz planes) from the aqueous and membrane sides, respectively. (From Ref. 17.)... [Pg.456]

In the simple case of electrostatic attraction alone, electrolyte ions can approach to a distance given by their primary solvation sheaths, where a monomolecular solvent layer remains between the electrode and the solvated ions. The plane through the centres of the ions at maximum approach under the influence of electrostatic forces is called the outer Helmholtz plane and the solution region between the outer Helmholtz plane and the electrode surface is called the Helmholtz or compact layer. Quantities related to the outer Helmholtz plane are mostly denoted by symbols with the subscript 2. [Pg.210]

Fig. 4.1 Structure of the electric double layer and electric potential distribution at (A) a metal-electrolyte solution interface, (B) a semiconductor-electrolyte solution interface and (C) an interface of two immiscible electrolyte solutions (ITIES) in the absence of specific adsorption. The region between the electrode and the outer Helmholtz plane (OHP, at the distance jc2 from the electrode) contains a layer of oriented solvent molecules while in the Verwey and Niessen model of ITIES (C) this layer is absent... Fig. 4.1 Structure of the electric double layer and electric potential distribution at (A) a metal-electrolyte solution interface, (B) a semiconductor-electrolyte solution interface and (C) an interface of two immiscible electrolyte solutions (ITIES) in the absence of specific adsorption. The region between the electrode and the outer Helmholtz plane (OHP, at the distance jc2 from the electrode) contains a layer of oriented solvent molecules while in the Verwey and Niessen model of ITIES (C) this layer is absent...
A rigorous solution of this problem was attempted, for example, in the hard sphere approximation by D. Henderson, L. Blum, and others. Here the discussion will be limited to the classical Gouy-Chapman theory, describing conditions between the bulk of the solution and the outer Helmholtz plane and considering the ions as point charges and the solvent as a structureless dielectric of permittivity e. The inner electrical potential 0(1) of the bulk of the solution will be taken as zero and the potential in the outer Helmholtz plane will be denoted as 02. The space charge in the diffuse layer is given by the Poisson equation... [Pg.225]

By means of the thermodynamic theory of the double layer and the theory of the diffuse layer it is possible to determine the charge density ox corresponding to the adsorbed ions, i.e. ions in the inner Helmholtz plane, and the potential of the outer Helmholtz plane 2 in the presence of specific adsorption. [Pg.230]

The introduction of the concept of the micropotential permits derivation of various expressions for the potential difference produced by the adsorbed anions, i.e. for the potential difference between the electrode and the solution during specific adsorption of ions. It has been found that, with small coverage of the surface by adsorbed species, the micropotential depends almost linearly on the distance from the surface. The distance between the inner and outer Helmholtz planes is denoted as xx 2 and the distance between the surface of the metal and the outer Helmholtz plane as jc2. The micropotential, i.e. the potential difference between the inner and... [Pg.231]

Fig. 4.6 The adsorbed anion A induces a positive charge excess at the outer Helmholtz plane, which can be represented as its image A. The plane of imaging is identical with the outer Helmholtz plane. (According to B. B. Damaskin, O. A. Petrii and V. V. Batrakov)... Fig. 4.6 The adsorbed anion A induces a positive charge excess at the outer Helmholtz plane, which can be represented as its image A. The plane of imaging is identical with the outer Helmholtz plane. (According to B. B. Damaskin, O. A. Petrii and V. V. Batrakov)...
Consider a solid surface in contact with a dilute electrolyte solution. The plane where motion of the liquid can commence is parallel to the outer Helmholtz plane but shifted in the direction into the bulk of the solution. The electric potential in this plane with respect to the solution is termed the electrokinetic potential ( = 02 ). [Pg.253]

If the electrolyte components can react chemically, it often occurs that, in the absence of current flow, they are in chemical equilibrium, while their formation or consumption during the electrode process results in a chemical reaction leading to renewal of equilibrium. Electroactive substances mostly enter the charge transfer reaction when they approach the electrode to a distance roughly equal to that of the outer Helmholtz plane (Section 5.3.1). It is, however, sometimes necessary that they first be adsorbed. Similarly, adsorption of the products of the electrode reaction affects the electrode reaction and often retards it. Sometimes, the electroinactive components of the solution are also adsorbed, leading to a change in the structure of the electrical double layer which makes the approach of the electroactive substances to the electrode easier or more difficult. Electroactive substances can also be formed through surface reactions of the adsorbed substances. Crystallization processes can also play a role in processes connected with the formation of the solid phase, e.g. in the cathodic deposition of metals. [Pg.261]

The value of the electric potential affecting the activation enthalpy of the electrode reaction is decreased by the difference in the electrical potential between the outer Helmholtz plane and the bulk of the solution, 2, so that the activation energies of the electrode reactions are not given by Eqs (5.2.10) and (5.2.18), but rather by the equations... [Pg.286]

The Frumkin theory of the effect of the electrical double layer on the rate of the electrode reaction is a gross simplification. For example, the electrode reaction does not occur only at the outer Helmholtz plane but also at a somewhat greater distance from the electrode surface. More detailed considerations indicate, however, that Eq. (5.3.20) can still be used to describe the effect of the electrical double layer as a good approximation. [Pg.289]

The electric field or ionic term corresponds to an ideal parallel-plate capacitor, with potential drop g (ion) = qMd/4ire. Itincludes a contribution from the polarizability of the electrolyte, since the dielectric constant is included in the expression. The distance d between the layers of charge is often taken to be from the outer Helmholtz plane (distance of closest approach of ions in solution to the metal in the absence of specific adsorption) to the position of the image charge in the metal a model for the metal is required to define this position properly. The capacitance per unit area of the ideal capacitor is a constant, e/Aird, often written as Klon. The contribution to 1/C is 1 /Klon this term is much less important in the sum (larger capacitance) than the other two contributions.2... [Pg.14]

The experimental data bearing on the question of the effect of different metals and different crystal orientations on the properties of the metal-electrolyte interface have been discussed by Hamelin et al.27 The results of capacitance measurements for seven sp metals (Ag, Au, Cu, Zn, Pb, Sn, and Bi) in aqueous electrolytes are reviewed. The potential of zero charge is derived from the maximum of the capacitance. Subtracting the diffuse-layer capacitance, one derives the inner-layer capacitance, which, when plotted against surface charge, shows a maximum close to qM = 0. This maximum, which is almost independent of crystal orientation, is explained in terms of the reorientation of water molecules adjacent to the metal surface. Interaction of different faces of metal with water, ions, and organic molecules inside the outer Helmholtz plane are discussed, as well as adsorption. [Pg.16]

Most cations are strongly solvated, since their radii are small, and the free energy of solvation is approximately proportional to z2/r +, where ze0 is the cation charge in coulombs and r+ its ionic radius. The result of this is that even if the charge on the electrode is negative, there is usually little tendency for these cations to shed their water molecules and adsorb directly on the metal surface. Thus, the distance of closest approach of cations is determined by the radius of the inner solvent coordination sphere, and if the metal surface itself constitutes a plane, then the cation nuclei, at the distance of closest approach, will also constitute a plane termed the outer Helmholtz plane (OH P). [Pg.14]


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Double outer Helmholtz plane

Electrical outer-Helmholtz plane

Helmholtz

Helmholtz plane

OHp = outer Helmholtz plane

Outer Helmholtz plane , electrode

Outer Helmholtz plane . See

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