Abstract
Methanol electrooxidation at a Pt band electrode is studied in a microfluidic flow cell (MFFC) with simultaneous electrochemical detection of formic acid at a down-stream sensor (detector) Pd electrode. Detection of formic acid at the Pd electrode is possible through either a fast voltammetry or a potential step procedure. In both cases, maximizing the detection signal (oxidation current) requires Pd oxide formation and reduction before detection. Pd oxide formation is needed to oxidize surface-bound carbonaceous species while Pd oxide reduction is needed to reactivate the electrode surface. Although formic acid alone is easily detected and provides a stable detection signal at the Pd sensor electrode, simultaneous formation of formaldehyde during methanol oxidation degrades the detection signal at the Pd electrode over time. We show that dynamic detection of sub-millimolar formic acid concentrations in 2M methanol is possible at a time resolution down to 2 s. Dynamic detection during methanol oxidation at platinum shows that production of soluble intermediates occurs at all potentials where an oxidation current is observed. Furthermore, a higher faradaic efficiency to formic acid occurs during the main methanol oxidation peak in the positive-going sweep compared to the negative-going sweep, and is higher still at potentials above 1V. This work shows that microfluidic flow cells can be used for fast and dynamic detection of soluble reaction intermediates by using down-stream electrodes with custom potential step or sweep sequences.
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