Abstract

The present work describes the application of scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM) in the feedback mode to determine the kinetics of oxygen reduction at or near the liquid/liquid interface – between water and 1,2-dichloroethane (w/DCE). The system contained decamethylferrocene (DMFc) in DCE as the electron donor and acids in water as a proton source. In this approach, decamethylferrocenium (DMFc+) is reduced at the tip of a microelectrode in DCE and the electrogenerated DMFc reacts with protons and oxygen to be re-oxidized in a following chemical reaction (catalytic EC’ mechanism). When a high Galvani potential difference was applied across the liquid/liquid interface, protons would transfer rapidly to the organic phase. Under this condition, SECM approach curves toward the liquid/liquid interface showed dramatic current increases at distances far from the interface. This indicates that oxygen reduction takes place mainly in the bulk DCE; however, at lower Galvani potential differences, where the proton transfer is slow, oxygen reduction was also observed at the interface. Finally, SECM feedback mode measurements with the tip approaching a conductive substrate were used to determine the kinetics of the homogeneous reaction, with an obtained apparent rate constant of 0.2–0.5m3mol−1s−1.

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