Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.103, No.15, 2963-2969, 1999
Variable-temperature microelectrode voltammetry: Application to diffusion coefficients and electrode reaction mechanisms
An apparatus for the measurement of steady-state microelectrode voltammetry at elevated temperatures is described. The scope of this experimental approach as a method for the determination of diffusion coefficients at variable temperatures in the case of simple one-electron processes is demonstrated. Diffusion coefficients over a range of temperatures are derived for N,N,N',N'-tetramethylphenylenediamine in both acetonitrile and water solvents, tris-4-bromophenylamine in acetonitrile, and ferrocene in acetonitrile and dimethylformamide from which activation energies for diffusion are obtained. Diffusion coefficient values are used to derive Stokes-Einstein radii for each species in solution. The electroreductions of o-bromonitrobenzene in dimethylformamide and 9-chloroanthracene in acetonitrile are studied as a function of temperature and activation energies estimated for carbon-halide bond cleavage in the corresponding radical anions.
Keywords:HEATED CYLINDRICAL MICROELECTRODES;SINGLE-CRYSTAL SURFACES;SUPERCRITICAL FLUIDS;CYCLIC VOLTAMMETRY;ACID-SOLUTIONS;ELECTROCHEMISTRY;REDUCTION;ACETONITRILE;PLATINUM;DONOR