Abstract

A mercury microelectrode formed by electroreduction of mercury on an inlaid gold microdisk is experimentally shown to be well modeled by oblate spheroidal geometry when the ratio of the semiminor axis to the semimajor axis of the protruding drop is less than 1. The validity of the geometry is established by comparison of the experimentally determined coefficient in the steady-state diffusion current equation with the theoretical value for oblate spheroidal geometry. Spherical cap geometry is also shown to be an equally valid geometric model; however, theoretical treatment for this system is more difficult. The theory of a quasi-reversible electrode process is developed and applied to the determination of the electrode parameters of the RuIII(NH3)6/RuII(NH3)6 electrode reaction on a mercury oblate spheroidal microelectrode. Results agree well with others found in the literature for the same process on a mercury electrode.

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