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1.
The title subject has been studied using stationary, single-pulse, and chronopotentiometric polarization measurements on the Zn/Zn(II) electrode and equilibrium measurements on the same and the Ag/AgCl electrode in 0.5–4 M chloride solutions at 25°C. The Zn/Zn(II) electrode reactions are found to occur in two consecutive charge-transfer steps with Zn(I) as intermediate. The ion-transfer step Zn/Zn(I) is too fast to exhibit its kinetics. The electron-transfer step Zn(I)/Zn(II) mostly occurs by the couple ZnCl2(H2O)y/ZnCl2(H2O)y, but species with one or no chloride ligand take over as the main electroactive ones at chloride (or salt) concentrations below 1 M. The value of y is not clearly revealed by the data. Some sluggishness in complex equilibration and some, double-layer effects are observed. A convenient scale for single-ion activities is described, used, and recommended.  相似文献   

2.
The title subject has been studied by galvanostatic single-pulse, chronopotentiometric and equilibrium measurements on the Zn(Hg)/Zn(II) electrode in x M KI+(1?x) M KCl (x from 0 to 1), 1 M KBr and 1 M MeCl (Me=Li, Na, K and Cs) solutions of pH 3 at 25°C. Quantitative information about the effect of specifically adsorbed halides on the rates of the Zn(II)/Zn(I) and the Zn(I)/Zn(Hg) steps is obtained separately (for the latter step mainly at potentials near ?1.0 V(SCE)), and the latter step seems to be more influenced than the former by the adsorption. An attempt is made to correlate the adsorption effect on the rate of the Zn(II)/Zn(I) step to double-layer parameters according to recent models for such effects. The extra current observed at potentials where the halides are adsorbed, seems to vary with the surface activity of the specifically adsorbed ion. The lack of any observed kinetic effect of Cs+, which is specifically adsorbed at these potentials, is possibly due to the Cs+ specific adsorption enhancing the Cl? specific adsorption and vice versa, so that the decelerating and accelerating effects by these ions may cancel each other.  相似文献   

3.
The title subject has been studied through equilibrium potential measurements on the Zn/Zn(II) and the Ag/AgCl electrode vs. SCE and galvanostatic single-step and chronopotentiometric polarization measurements on the former electrode, all in acidified (to pH about 3) solutions of 0.005 M ZnCl2+0.99 M MeCl (for Me=Li, Na, K, and Cs) at 25°C. It is found that the Zn(II) activity decreases together with the alkali-ion activity along the sequence LiCl>NaCl>KCl>CsCl, that the chloride-ion activity essentially is insensitive to mutual substitutions of alkali ions, and that the Zn/Zn(II) reactions exhibit no other than pure activity effects of such substitutions. The results support that the Zn/Zn(II) electrode reacts in two consecutive steps with Zn(I) as intermediate, and that some sluggishness appears in chemical reactions to and from electroactive Zn(II) species.  相似文献   

4.
The title subject has been studied through galvanostatic single-pulse and chronopotentiometric measurements on the Mn(Hg)/Mn(II) electrode and equilibrium measurements on the same and the Ag/AgCl electrode, all in x MMnCl2+(0.5?x)M MgCl2 solutions of pH 4.3–4.9 at 25°C. The Mn(Hg)/Mn(II) reactions are found to occur in two consecutive steps, an unsymmetric (αc near 0.8) ion-transfer step Mn(Hg)/Mn(I) and an essentially symmetric (αc near 0.5) electron-transfer step Mn(I)/Mn(II). Besides charge transfer, no sluggishness other than diffusion is observed, but the dispersed precipitate Mn2Hg5 of saturated amalgam serves as an ageing-dependent source of anodic reactant Mn(Hg). Quantitative kinetic and thermodynamic data are presented and discussed. Comparisons are made to corresponding reactions for the succeeding elements iron, cobalt, nickel, copper, and zinc.  相似文献   

5.
Combined thermodynamic and kinetic studies have revealed amalgam properties, solution activities, and diffusion data besides charge-transfer parameters and exchange rates for either step of the Cu(Hg)/Cu(II) electrode in aqueous solutions of xM CuSO4+(0.5?x) M MgSO4+H2SO4 (to pH about 2.5) at 25°C. The studies allow separation of mean ionic activities into convenient single-ion ones. The kinetic results demonstrate the consecutive two-step mechanism involved. Comparison is made to the solid Cu/Cu(II) electrode, and double-layer effects are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
It is found that the equilibrium potential of the Zn(Hg)/Zn(II) system depends on the concentration of ammonia molecules and solution pH. The dependence conforms to the literature data on the stability constants for ammonia and hydroxyammonia complexes of zinc. Their reduction on a dropping mercury electrode in solutions of pH 9.2–12 and [NH3] = 0.05–2 M yields one irreversible cathodic wave with a diffusion limiting current. In dilute supporting electrolytes, the plateau of the latter is preceded by a maximum due to accumulation of insoluble reduction products on the surface of the mercury drop. The pH and [NH3] dependences of the half-wave potential of waves that are undistorted by a maximum are analyzed with allowance made for a change in the composition of zinc(II) complexes in the bulk solution. According to the analysis, the slow two-electron electrochemical stage involves complexes Zn(NH3)2 2+ that form from complexes present in solution in preceding reversible chemical reactions. The effect the supporting-electrolyte concentration has on the electroreduction rate of zinc(II) complexes and the mechanism of the electrochemical stage is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Combined thermodynamic and kinetic studies have yielded convenient single-ion activity coefficients for manganese(II), alkaline-earth, and chloride ions and standard exchange currents for the two steps of the Mn(Hg)/Mn(II) electrode in 0.005 M MnCl2+0.495 M MeCl2 (for Me=Mg, Ca, Sr, Ba, and Mn) at 25°C. The results indicate that the fall in mean ionic activity coefficient for the alkaline-earth chlorides along the sequence from magnesium to barium is carried to a larger extent by the cation than by the anion, that also the activity coefficient for the minority cation Mn(II) falls along this sequence, and that other than activity-coefficient effects on the Mn(Hg)/Mn(II) reactions appear only with barium ions, which retard the reactions additionally. The results are discussed with emphasis on ionic interactions and double-layer effects.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The influence of thiourea on the Zn(II)/Zn(Hg) electrode process was studied in water/methanol mixtures under addition of NaClO4. Diffusion coefficients, formal potentials, and charge transfer rate constants have been determined. It is postulated that the composition of the active complex formed on the electrode plays the dominant role in the acceleration of the electrode processes.
Der beschleunigende Einfluß von Thioharnstoff auf die Elektroreduktion von Zn(II) an einer Quecksilberelektrode in Wasser-Methanol-Gemischen
Zusammenfassung Der Einfluß von Thioharnstoff auf den Elektrodenprozeß Zn(II)/Zn(Hg) wurde in Wasser-Methanol-Mischungen unter Zusatz von NaClO4 untersucht. Diffusionskoeffizienten, Potentiale und Geschwindigkeitskonstanten der Ladungsübertragung wurden bestimmt. Es wird angenommen, daß bei der Beschleunigung der Elektrodenprozesse die Zusammensetzung des an der Elektrode gebildeten aktiven Komplexes eine entscheidende Rolle spielt.
  相似文献   

9.
A new method of determining electrochemical kinetic parameters by square-wave polarography was presented, in which the faradaic current at θ/2, θ being the half-period of superimposed square-wave voltage, was used for the analysis. The method gave the following kinetic parameters for the electrode reaction, Zn(II) + 2e(Hg), in aqueous solutions at 25° C: kcθ=0.0052 cm s?1 and αc=0.36 in 1 M KCl, kcθ=0.011 cm s?1 and αc=0.30 in 1 M KBr, and kcθ=0.020 cm s?1 and αc=0.52 in 1 M KNCS. Induced adsorption of Zn(II) on the dropping mercury electrode was suggested in solutions containing thiocyanate ions.  相似文献   

10.
A procedure is proposed enabling corrections to be made of the measured admittance components for the resistance uncompensated by the positive feedback, and so to determine the charge-transfer rate constants in dilute solutions of supporting electrolytes. The procedure was checked for the Zn2+/Zn(Hg) redox system in NaNO3 up to 10?2M. A large increase of the measured rate constants with the dilution of the supporting electrolyte was found, obeying the Frumkin double-layer correction.  相似文献   

11.
《Talanta》1987,34(9):763-769
The conditional potentials of redox systems not involving protons have been studied as a function of phosphoric acid concentration (1–14M), with the ferricinium/ferrocene couple as the comparison system. The following systems were considered: Cu(II)/Cu, Cd(II)/Cd, Sn(II)/Sn, Zn(II)/Zn, Ag(I)/Ag, Pb(II)/Pb, Hg(II)/Hg, Bi(III)/Bi and particularly Fe(III)/Fe(II) and Fe(II)/Fe. The hexacyanoferrate(III)/hexacyanoferrate(II) and iodine/iodide couples were also studied. The results are presented as a potential—H3PO4 concentration diagram (or potential—acidity level diagram).  相似文献   

12.
*CpIr(η-C6Me6)2+/0 (*Cpη5-C5Me5) displays Nernstian two-electron voltammetry at a Hg electrode, but quasi-reversible charge transfer kinetics at solid electrodes. Cyclic voltammetry (CV) peak shapes and separations change drastically from one solvent to another at Pt, ΔEp values being as small as 170 mV in acetone and as large as 350 mV in CH3CN (v = 0.03 V/s). These variations arise from changes in the relative E° values of the one-electron Ir(III)/Ir(II) and Ir(II)/Ir(I) couples, and from changes in charge-transfer rates. It is concluded that the Ir(II)/Ir(I) couple has a significantly lower charge-transfer rate than the Ir(III)/Ir(II) couple at platinum electrodes. The sensitivity of the CV curves to the relative E° values allows the approximate determination of the individual E° values for each one-electron process. In contrast, Nernstian conditions allow only the average of the two one-electron E° potentials to be determined. Solvents with higher solvating power are shown to facilitate the thermodynamics of the two-electron transfer process by moving E°2 positive with respect to E°1. Possible reasons for the abnormally slow charge transfer rates at Pt electrodes are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Effects of concentrations of ammonia (0.3–5.8 M) and supporting electrolytes (NaF, NaClO4; 0.1–0.5 M) on the kinetics of electroreduction of ammonia complexes of cobalt(II) at a dropping mercury electrode are studied. Most experiments are performed with low concentrations of cobalt(II) complexes (1 × 10–5 to 2 × 10–5 M) in the absence of a polarographic maximum. The dependence of the half-wave potential of the reversible cathodic wave pertaining to the reduction of ammonia complexes of cobalt(II) on the concentration of ammonia molecules is obtained. It is found from the dependence that, at ammonia concentrations of 0.5–2.6 M, the slow electrochemical stage involves predominantly complexes Co(NH3)2 2+. At higher ammonia concentrations, the stage involves complexes Co(NH3) k 2+ (k > 2), which form in preceding chemical stages from complexes Co(NH3) i 2+ (i = 3–6) that are predominant in solution. Values of the diffusion coefficients for complexes Co(NH3) i 2+, apparent transfer coefficients, and rate constant of the process of electroreduction of ammonia complexes of cobalt(II) are determined. The reasons for the complicating effect the insoluble products of reduction of cobalt(II) complexes have on the shape of polarographic waves are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Poly(propylene imine) dendrimers having 8, 32, and 64 primary amine end groups form diamino Cu(II), diamino Zn(II), and tetramino Co(III) complexes that are identified spectrophotometrically and titrimetrically. The dendrimer–metal ion complexes catalyze the hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl diphenyl phosphate in zwitterionic buffer solutions at pH ≤ 8.1 with relative activities Cu(II) > Zn(II) > Co(III). The rates of hydrolysis are faster with sodium perchlorate than with sodium chloride to control ionic strength. In sodium perchlorate solutions with Cu(II) the rates increase with increasing size of the dendrimer. In sodium chloride solutions with Cu(II) the rates decrease with increasing size of the dendrimer. Rate constants in buffered sodium chloride solutions of dendrimers and 1.0mM Cu(II) are 1.3–6.3 times faster than in the absence of Cu(II). The fastest hydrolyses occurred at a dendrimer primary amine to Cu(II) ratio NH2/Cu ≤ 2. At NH2/Cu = 4 and with the 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclodecane complex of Cu(II) hydrolysis rates were much slower. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci A: Polym Chem 37: 2727–2736, 1999  相似文献   

15.
To recover dysprosium (Dy) from LiCl–KCl molten salt, the electrochemical mechanism of Dy(III) on liquid Zn electrode and co-deposition of Dy(III) and Zn(II) on W electrode were studied using electrochemical methods. Cyclic voltammetry results demonstrated that the redox process of Dy on liquid Zn electrode is reversible and controlled by diffusion. Reverse chronopotentiograms showed that the transition time ratio of reduction and oxidation is ~3:1, revealing the redox of Dy on liquid Zn electrode is a kind of soluble–soluble system: Dy(III) + 3e = (Dy–Zn)solution. The half-wave potential of Dy(III) was almost constant with the increase in scanning rate. The electrochemical separation of metallic Dy from the molten salt was performed using constant potential electrolysis, and the product characterized using X-ray diffraction and scanning electron microscopy–energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy was the thermodynamic unstable compound DyZn5. Also, the co-deposition mechanism of Dy(III) and Zn(II) was explored, indicating that Dy(III) could deposit on pre-deposited Zn and form Dy–Zn compounds: Zn(II) + 2e = Zn and xDy(III) + yZn + 3xe = DyxZny. Moreover, the effect of Dy(III) concentration on the formation of Dy–Zn compounds was investigated. The redox peak currents corresponding to different Dy–Zn compounds changed with the increase in Dy(III) concentration. The co-deposition of Dy(III) and Zn(II) was performed using constant current electrolysis at diverse Dy(III) concentrations. The different Dy–Zn compounds were produced by controlling Dy(III) concentration.  相似文献   

16.
Mechanism of adsorption of Zn(II) and Cd(II) ions at the TiO2 (anatase)/electrolyte interface has been studied by different experimental techniques (potentiometric titration, microelectrophoresis and adsorption measurements of zinc and cadmium species). It was found that the point of zero charge (pzc) of anatase (pH =5.8) was shifted to the lower pH values with increasing concentrations of Zn(II) or Cd(Il) ions. The surface charge of anatase in the presence of Zn(II) and Cd(II) for pH > pHpzc was higher than that observed for original sample in NaClO4 solutions only. Due to low coverage of anatase surface with Zn(II) or Cd(II) species almost no shift of the isoelectric point (iep) or charge reversal were observed. Adsorption density vs. pH plots for both Zn(Il) or Cd(II) showed, typical for multivalent ions, presence of “adsorption edge.”  相似文献   

17.
Some metal complexes of DL–methionine were prepared in aqueous medium and characterized by different physico-chemical methods. Methionine forms 1:2 complexes with metal, M(II). The general empirical formula of the complexes is proposed as [(C5H10NO2S)2MII]; where MII = Mn(II), Co(II), Ni(II), Cu(II), Zn(II), Cd(II) and Hg(II). All the complexes are extremely stable in light and air and optically inactive. Magnetic susceptibility data of the complexes demonstrate that they are high spin paramagnetic complex except Zn(II), Cd(II) and Hg(II) complexes. The bonding pattern in the complexes are similar to each other as indicated by electronic absorption spectra and FTIR spectral analysis. The current potential data, peak separation (AE) and the peak current ratio (ipa/ipc) of the (Mn, Cu and Cd) complexes indicate that the charge transfer processes are irreversible, the systems are diffusion controlled and also adsorptive controlled. The charge transfer rate constant of metals in their complexes are less than those in their metal salts at identical experimental conditions due to the coordination of metal with methionine.  相似文献   

18.
Kinetics and mechanism of electroreduction of complexes Pd(NH3)4 2+ on a dropping mercury electrode (DME) and a Pd electrode, as well as ammonia complexes of Co(II), Ni(II), and Zn(II) and hydroxyammonia complexes of Zn(II) on DME at different concentrations of ammonia and supporting electrolytes and different pH values are discussed. The half-wave potentials of electroreduction of ammonia complexes of Pd(II) and Ni(II) on DME in the absence of a polarographic maximum obey an equation that takes into account the effect the EDL structure has on the rate of a slow outer-sphere electrochemical stage. As opposed to Pd(II) complexes, the reduction of the other complexes involves preceding reversible chemical stages, which yield diammonia complexes undergoing a direct reduction on DME. The reasons for the emergence of a polarographic maximum upon an increase in the concentration of reduced complexes and the time of recording an instant current are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Ammonium[N(o-chlorophenyl)dithiocarbamate], NH4(OCD), ammonium [N(m-chlorophenyl)dithiocarbamate], NH4(MCD) and ammonium [N(p-chlorophenyl)dithiocarbamate], NH4(PCD) and their complexes with Cu(II), Zn(II), Cd(II) and Sn(II) have been synthesised. These complexes have been characterised on the basis of chemical analyses, molecular weight determinations, conductance measurements, electronic and IR spectral studies. Thermal behaviour of the compounds has been studied with the aid of TG and DTA techniques in static air atmosphere. Heats of reaction for different decomposition steps have been calculated from the DTA curves. The end products obtained after thermal decomposition of the complexes were identified by elemental analyses and IR spectral data.  相似文献   

20.
The electrode reaction Hg(II)/Hg in complex chloride solutions with dimethyl sulfoxide as solvent has been investigated at the equilibrium potential by the faradaic impedance method and a cyclic current-step method. The ionic strength was 1 M with ammonium perchlorate as supporting electrolyte, and the temperature was 25°C. Double-layer data have been determined by electrocapillary measurements. From the results of the kinetic measurements at ligand numbers ≤1.1 or ≥2.3 it is concluded that the overall charge transfer proceeds step-wise. The solvated Hg2+ and Hg22+ as well as the complexes HgClj2?j and the dinuclear Hg2Cl3+ contribute to the exchange current density. The rate constant of the step HgClj2?j/ Hg(I) is found to increase with the number of Cl? coordinated. This increase can be correlated to a decrease in solvation and a lengthening of the Hg?Cl distance. For 1.1 << 2.3, impedance measurements indicate a rate-controlling adsorption step. It is suggested that the uncharged HgCl2 then forms an adsorbed network on the mercury surface.  相似文献   

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