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Potential step methods planar electrode

The important concept in these dynamic electrochemical methods is diffusion-controlled oxidation or reduction. Consider a planar electrode that is immersed in a quiescent solution containing O as the only electroactive species. This situation is illustrated in Figure 3.1 A, where the vertical axis represents concentration and the horizontal axis represents distance from the electrodesolution interface. This interface or boundary between electrode and solution is indicated by the vertical line. The dashed line is the initial concentration of O, which is homogeneous in the solution the initial concentration of R is zero. The excitation function that is impressed across the electrode-solution interface consists of a potential step from an initial value E , at which there is no current due to a redox process, to a second potential Es, as shown in Figure 3.2. The value of this second potential is such that essentially all of O at the electrode surface is instantly reduced to R as in the generalized system of Reaction 3.1 ... [Pg.52]

In practice two methods are used for stationary planar electrodes in quiescent solution chronoamperometry and chronopotentiometry. By use of an electroactive species whose concentration, diffusion coefficient, and n value are known, the electrode area can be calculated from the experimental data. In chronoamperometry, the potential is stepped from a value where no reaction takes place to a value that ensures that the concentration of reactant species will be maintained at essentially zero concentration at the electrode surface. Under conditions of linear diffusion to a planar electrode the current is given by the Cottrell equation [Chapter 3, Eq. (3.6)] ... [Pg.217]


See other pages where Potential step methods planar electrode is mentioned: [Pg.39]    [Pg.143]    [Pg.442]    [Pg.39]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.131]    [Pg.22]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.161 , Pg.162 , Pg.163 ]




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