Abstract

A platinum disk-platinum ring electrode was used to investigate the oxidation of sulfur dioxide by iodine and triiodide in aqueous solutions. Contrary to methanolic solutions, where the monomethyl sulfite ion is the only oxidizable species, in aqueous solutions both the hydrogen sulfite ion and the sulfite ion can be oxidized. The reaction rate was generally so high, that the method for measurements of homogeneous second order reactions had to be used. At pH values >5, the reaction proceeded too fast to be measured reliably. In a solution “diluted” with ethanol (50% of weight), however, the reaction rate was within the range where a rotating ring-disk electrode can be applied to measure fast homogeneous reactions. At very low pH values both the first order calculation technique and the second order method could be used. The results with both methods were in fair agreement.

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