Abstract

Reliable electrochemical measurements depend on the availability of robust reference electrodes (RE) with well-defined potentials. While many reliable REs are known, they are not applicable in certain demanding media such as ionic liquids, nor in small confined spaces. Here, we describe the fabrication of a simple yet robust Ag/Ag2S micro-reference electrode (μ-RE) where a micron-thick Ag2S layer is formed by isothermal reaction with sulfur vapor. Scanning electron microscopy, X-ray photoemission spectroscopy, and spectroscopic ellipsometry characterization reveals that the optimal morphology corresponds to a slightly porous Ag2S film. We demonstrate that the Ag/Ag2S μ-RE can be operated in and cycled through a wide variety of polar organic solvents, including common protic solvents (EtOH), aprotic solvents (ACN, DMSO, NMP, DMF) and ionic liquids (EMIM-TFSI, BMP-TFSI), with short equilibration time (tens of seconds) and little drift (<20 mV), without requiring encapsulation, protective liquid junctions, nor special conditioning. A redox potential of 0.54 ± 0.02 V was obtained for ferrocene in acetonitrile, which places this RE at 0.08 V vs Ag/AgCl. We have also successfully embedded the electrode inside the CR2032 coin cell to perform cyclic voltammetry of battery materials. These results underpin the suitability of this simple micro-reference electrode for a wide variety of electrochemical measurements in demanding and/or miniaturized environments.

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