Molecular-level insight into interfacial water at a buried electrode interface is essential in electrochemistry, but spectroscopic probing of the interface remains challenging. Here, using surface-specific heterodyne-detected sum-frequency generation (HD-SFG) spectroscopy, we directly access the interfacial water in contact with the graphene electrode supported on calcium fluoride (CaF2). We find phase transition-like variations of the HD-SFG spectra vs. applied potentials, which arises not from the charging/discharging of graphene but from the charging/discharging of the CaF2 substrate through the pseudocapacitive process. The potential-dependent spectra are nearly identical to the pH-dependent spectra, evidencing that the pseudocapacitive behavior is associated with a substantial local pH change induced by water dissociation between the CaF2 and graphene. Our work evidences the local molecular-level effects of pseudocapacitive charging at an electrode/aqueous electrolyte interface.
CITATION STYLE
Wang, Y., Seki, T., Liu, X., Yu, X., Yu, C. C., Domke, K. F., … Bonn, M. (2023). Direct Probe of Electrochemical Pseudocapacitive pH Jump at a Graphene Electrode**. Angewandte Chemie - International Edition, 62(10). https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.202216604
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