Electrochemical Oxidative Adsorption of Ethanethiolate on Ag(111)
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 1997 papers
Abstract
The electrochemical deposition of ethanethiolate monolayers on Ag(111) has been investigated by in-situ surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS), electrochemical quartz crystal microbalance (EQCM), and voltammetric methods. In aqueous 0.2 M NaOH solutions containing 5 mM ethanethiolate, the voltammetric response at Ag(111) displays two well-resolved surface waves with half-wave potentials (E1/2) of −1.17 and −0.95 V vs Ag/AgCl. The two-wave voltammetric response suggests a mechanism of monolayer deposition that consists of two energetically-distinct reaction steps, a conclusion supported by in-situ SERS and EQCM measurements of the potential-dependent adsorption isotherm. The voltammetric wave located at more negative potentials (E1/2 = −1.17 V) has a nearly ideal Nernstian shape and is associated with the initial rapid oxidative adsorption of ethanethiolate at submonolayer coverage. The second wave at more positive potentials (E1/2 = −0.95 V) corresponds to additional, but kinetically slower, oxidative adsorption of ethanethiolate resulting in an essentially complete monolayer (∼7.8 × 10-10 mol/cm2). The slower kinetics associated with this wave, as well as general features of the wave shape, suggest that structural ordering of the monolayer occurs during the second oxidation. A thermodynamic expression for the dependence of E1/2 on the bulk solution concentration of ethanethiolate is derived and employed to determine the number of electrons transferred, n = 1.06 ± 0.06, per molecule of ethanethiolate adsorbed on the Ag(111) surface. A value of n = 0.90 ± 0.14 has also been independently determined by EQCM and coulometric measurements of the mass adsorbed and electrical charge consumed, respectively, during monolayer deposition.
Related Papers
- → ASSESMENT OF FOULING POTENTIAL OF BIOPOLYMERS ISOLATED FROM SURFACE WATER USING QUARTZ CRYSTAL MICROBALANCE WITH DISSIPATION MONITORING(QCM-D)(2021)3 cited
- → Direct determination of hypoxen and its analogs by galvanostatic coulometry(2007)5 cited
- → Pilot-ion coulometry with dropping mercury electrodes(1961)6 cited
- → Coulometry ☆(2018)1 cited
- → Determination of water by controlled-potential coulometry(1965)1 cited