Abstract
The effects of various gaseous pollutants on the electrochemical activity of materials used as cathodes for membrane-covered amperometric oxygen detectors are described. It is shown that gold and platinum cathodes are not unduly affected by concentrations of sulphur dioxide and chlorine many times greater than those likely to be encountered in test solutions, and that a gold cathode is also unaffected by hydrogen sulphide. A platinum cathode is rapidly and significantly poisoned on contact with hydrogen sulphide; an analysis of the fall in the rate of oxygen reduction as a function of time indicates that the poisoning occurs by the blocking of surface sites by sulphide. The effect of hydrogen sulphide on silver, nickel and nickel sulphide electrodes is also reported. Of these materials, only nickel sulphide is an effective electrocatalyst for oxygen reduction in the presence of sulphide.
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