Electrode kinetics from a single experiment: multi-amplitude analysis in square-wave chronoamperometry

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Abstract

The recently introduced technique of square-wave chronoamperometry (SWCA) is studied under conditions of progressively increasing height of potential pulses (square-wave amplitude) within a single experiment. In multi-amplitude square-wave chronoamperometry (MA-SWCA) a potential modulation consisting of square-wave forward and reverse potential pulses is imposed on a constant mid-potential; the amplitude of pulses increases progressively during the experiment. This allows the fast and reliable estimation of kinetic parameters at a constant pulse frequency in a single experiment, based on the resulting feature known as the amplitude-based quasireversible maximum. The proposed methodology is tested by simulating the responses of a simple quasireversible electrode reaction of a dissolved redox couple and a surface confined electrode reaction. Compared with conventional square-wave voltammetry (SWV) and SWCA, MA-SWCA shows advantages in estimation of the standard rate constant in terms of simplicity, speed and efficiency for both studied electrode mechanisms.

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Guziejewski, D., Stojanov, L., Zwierzak, Z., Compton, R. G., & Mirceski, V. (2022). Electrode kinetics from a single experiment: multi-amplitude analysis in square-wave chronoamperometry. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, 24(39), 24419–24428. https://doi.org/10.1039/d2cp01888h

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