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3.1.2: Potentials in Electroanalytical Cells

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    203903
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    Potential can be described as the work required to move an electron or other point reference charge from an infinite distance away to a point of interest – inside of a metallic electrode, for example. The magnitude of the potential at the surface of an electrode depends on the excess charge that exists there above that of the metal alone. An external power supply is capable of forcing excess electrons into or out of the electrode, leading to a non-equilibrium condition at the interface. If a large excess of electrons is present in the electrode, the potential of the electrode is caused to be very negative, with the energy of the electrons in the electrode being very high. Likewise, excess positive charge caused by the removal of electrons from the electrode leads to a positive potential at the electrode, and low electron energy.

    The measurement of electrode energy requires that a reference point be established, and that individual electrode energies be taken relative to a potential that is fixed. This is normally done by introducing a second electrode, called the reference electrode, whose chemical composition is fixed and its potential energy unchanging. Thus, the term potential, in an electrochemical sense means the voltage difference between two electrodes, and is denoted “E”, with units of volts. The arrangement of a metal electrode immersed in a solution of charged electrolyte along with a reference electrode is referred to as an electrochemical cell (Figure 1), and E the cell potential.

    Fig1.PNG

    Figure 1

    Charge movement can occur between the metal electrode and a solution species when the cell potential is sufficient to either promote an electron into the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) of the solution species (called a reduction) or to allow movement from the highest occupied molecular orbital of the solution species (HOMO) into the metal electrode (called an oxidation). In either case, the electrons involved in charge movement end up in a place offering them the lowest available energy (“electrons are lazy”). This process is illustrated in Figure 2.

    Because work is being done by the metal electrode, it is commonly referred to as the working electrode. In the simplest description, the potential at which an electron transfer takes place can be related to the overall free energy change (∆G ) of the reaction by

    \[\mathrm{∆G = -n\: F\: E}\]

    where n is the stoichiometric number of electrons involved in the reaction and F is the Faraday constant which relates the total charge (in coulombs, C) of the reaction to the amount of product formed (96,485 C/mole for n = 1).

    Fig2.PNG

    Figure 2

    There exists a well-defined, critical energy required for any electrode process, called the E0. Tables of E0 values are available for many redox couples. The potentials found there were measured for each half-cell with all species present at unit activity relative to the standard hydrogen electrode. The standard hydrogen electrode (SHE) is a half-cell composed of an inert solid electrode like platinum on which hydrogen gas is adsorbed at unit activity, immersed in a solution containing hydrogen ions at unit activity. The half-cell reaction is given by

    \[\ce{2H^+(aq) + 2 e^- <=>H_2(g)} \hspace{30px} E^0= 0.000\: V\]

    and it has arbitrarily been assigned a half-cell potential of 0.000 V.

    At this point, it is adequate to view the oxidation/reduction process of a solution species as a function of potential applied to the working electrode. If the working electrode is more positive than the E0 for the solution species, the oxidized form of the species is stable at the electrode surface. Further, if the working electrode is more negative than the E0 the reduced form of the species will be stable. Together, the oxidized and reduced forms of the species represent a redox couple.

    Electron transfers of the type just described in which electrons are transferred across the metal-solution interface with a resulting oxidation or reduction of a solution species are called faradaic processes. Study of these charge transfer reactions is the goal of most techniques in analytical electrochemistry. Unfortunately, the complexity of the interfacial system is such that even in the absence of faradaic electron transfer, other processes do occur that can affect electrode behavior. These processes include adsorption, desorption, and charging of the interface as a result of changing electrode potential. These are called nonfaradaic processes, and lead us to a short discussion of what is termed the electrical double layer.


    3.1.2: Potentials in Electroanalytical Cells is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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