Abstract

In order determine whether formate is a reaction intermediate of the direct pathway for formic acid oxidation at a Pt electrode, formic acid (HCOOH) oxidation at a Pt(111) electrode has been studied by normal and fast scan voltammetry in 0.1 M HClO4 solutions with different HCOOH concentrations. The relationship between the HCOOH oxidation current density (j(ox)) and formate coverage (θ(formate)) is quantitatively analyzed. The kinetic simulation reveals that the previously proposed formate pathway, with decomposition of the bridge-bonded formate (HCOO(B)) as a rate determining step (rds), cannot be the main pathway responsible for the majority of the current for HCOOH oxidation. Instead, a kinetic model based on a mechanism with formic acid adsorption [structure: see text], along with simultaneous C-H bond activation as the rds for the direct pathway, explains the measured data well. It was found for the relatively slow rate of formic acid oxidation, that adsorption-desorption of the formate is faster, which competes for the surface sites for formic acid oxidation.

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