Abstract
The use of room-temperature ionic liquids (RTILs) as green media for electrochemical application is desirable. The electrodeposition behavior of platinum was investigated at a glassy carbon electrode in hydrophilic tetrafluoroborate and hydrophobic hexafluorophosphate RTILs containing chloroplatinic acid hexahydrate by cyclic voltammetric and potentiostatic transient techniques and atomic force microscopy (AFM). For comparison, the electrodeposition of platinum in aqueous solution was also investigated. The cyclic voltammograms after the first scan circle in these media were different from each other, showing the obvious media effect on the electrochemical behavior of chloroplatinic acid hexahydrate. The analysis of the experimental current transients showed that the electrodeposition process of platinum in these media was characteristic of three-dimensional progressive nucleation with diffusion-controlled hemispherical growth. AFM showed that the uniform, shiny electrodeposits of platinum obtained in and RTILs were fairly dense and that the separate spherical nanoclusters were less than 100 nm. For the electro-oxidation of methanol in solution, the platinum films prepared in both and RTILs exhibited high electrocatalytic current densities.
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