With the development of microtechnologies for energy conversion and storage, mass transfer and micromolar concentration variations need to be measured at the microscale. These advances need to be accompanied by novel imaging techniques with the capability of achieving high spatial resolution while detecting very small signal variations (less than 0.1%). Thus, in this study, a new microscopy technique is proposed based on a combination of electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) and visible imaging spectroscopy to measure the concentration fields at the micromolar scale in operando microfluidic fuel cells (MFCs). This technique exploits EIS modulation and Fourier analysis to reduce the noise during concentration field imaging. A mass transfer model in the periodic regime is derived to validate the measurements and to estimate the Tafel kinetics and mass diffusivities during potassium permanganate reduction from only one potential measurement. The proposed imaging method and mathematical framework presented in this study can be used to study binary electrochemical reactions without gas production.
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