Abstract

Molecular-level understanding of electrified solid/liquid interfaces has recently been enabled thanks to the development of novel in situ/operando spectroscopic tools. Among those, ambient pressure photoelectron spectroscopy performed in the tender/hard X-ray region and coupled with the “dip and pull” method makes it possible to simultaneously interrogate the chemical composition of the interface and built-in electrical potentials. On the other hand, only thin liquid films (on the order of tens of nanometers at most) can be investigated, since the photo-emitted electrons must travel through the electrolyte layer to reach the photoelectron analyzer. Due to the challenging control and stability of nm-thick liquid films, a detailed experimental electrochemical investigation of such thin electrolyte layers is still lacking. This work therefore aims at characterizing the electrochemical behavior of solid/liquid interfaces when confined in nanometer-sized regions using a stochastic simulation approach. The investigation was performed by modeling (i) the electron transfer between a solid surface and a one-electron redox couple and (ii) its diffusion in solution. Our findings show that the well-known thin-layer voltammetry theory elaborated by Hubbard can be successfully applied to describe the voltammetric behavior of such nanometer-sized interfaces. We also provide an estimation of the current densities developed in these confined interfaces, resulting in values on the order of few hundreds of nA·cm−2. We believe that our results can contribute to the comprehension of the physical/chemical properties of nano-interfaces, thereby aiding to a better understanding of the capabilities and limitations of the “dip and pull” method.

Highlights

  • The development of in situ/operando characterization tools aiming to directly probe solid/liquid interfaces [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8] has greatly advanced our comprehension of molecular-level processes occurring at these interfaces, such as specific adsorption of ions, charge transfer dynamics and electrical (Galvani) potential formation

  • Our findings show that the electrochemical behavior of these “confined interfaces” can be described in terms of the well-known thin-layer voltammetry theory elaborated by Hubbard [35], due to the mass transport limitations along the direction parallel to the solid/liquid interface

  • That the simulation methodology has been validated, we proceed to characterize the voltammetric response of the “confined interface”

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Summary

Introduction

The development of in situ/operando characterization tools aiming to directly probe solid/liquid interfaces [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8] has greatly advanced our comprehension of molecular-level processes occurring at these interfaces, such as specific adsorption of ions, charge transfer dynamics and electrical (Galvani) potential formation. Several spectroscopic methods based on photon in/photon out and photon in/electron out approaches have been developed and successfully applied to investigate electrified solid/liquid interfaces. The extension of AP-XPS to high photon energies (and, high photoelectron KEs) [7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,19] is suited for investigating solid/liquid interfaces. Photoelectrons with a KE between 2000 and 10,000 eV have an Surfaces 2020, 3, 392–407; doi:10.3390/surfaces3030029 www.mdpi.com/journal/surfaces

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