Abstract

Spectroelectrochemical (SEC) analyses combine spectroscopic measurements with electrochemical techniques and can provide deep insight into complex multi-component chemical reaction systems. SEC experiments typically produce large amounts of spectroscopic data. Chemometric techniques are required for the data analysis and aim at extracting the underlying pure component information. Here we analyze spectroelectrochemically gained UV–vis data from five molybdenum mono-dithiolene complexes with changing redox states. SEC enables an electrochemical control of the mixture composition which supports the application of chemometric curve resolution techniques. The factor ambiguity problem is addressed by a multi-method approach combining chemometric tools from the evolving factor analysis (EFA) and from the area of feasible solutions (AFS) methodology in combination with factor duality arguments. EFA enables a subsystem analysis. Two subsystems with three species each are identified, which belong to a reductive and to an oxidative region. A joint species is contained in both regions. A complete pure component decomposition becomes possible in a final step.

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