Abstract
AbstractInvited for this month's cover picture is the Electrochemical group at Laboratoire Pasteur, École Normale Supérieure, France. The cover picture provides an allegory of the surprising fact that whatever the high degree of geometric randomness of electrochemical arrays of electroactive sites, as the beige array with its Voronoi tessellated unit cells shown at the left, their voltammetric responses are almost indistinguishable from those of fully periodic ones, idealized by the green honeycomb matrix at the right. This occurs as soon as peak‐shaped voltammograms are observed due to full interactions of the diffusion layers generated by individual active sites. This justifies why the theory proposed by Amatore and Savéant almost 40 years ago to describe the behavior of electrochemical networks has always provided solid outcomes even for random ones. Learn more about the story behind the research featured on the front cover in this issue's Cover Profile. Read the full text of the Article at 10.1002/celc.202100310.
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