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1.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 22(26): 14953-14964, 2020 Jul 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32588006

RESUMEN

Electrochemical aspects of Bi electrocrystallization from a bath containing bismuth nitrate in a mixture of ethylene glycol and water are addressed. Bismuth nanowires with diameters of 50-120 nm and a length of up to a few dozen microns were prepared by electrodeposition into the pores of anodic aluminium oxide templates. Crystal structure and morphology of electrodeposited materials were characterized using electron microscopy, selected area electron diffraction, and X-ray diffraction analysis. Factors affecting the formation of single or polycrystalline nanowires and their crystallographic orientation are discussed. The prospects of electrodeposited Bi nanostructures for microelectronics are illustrated by the quantitative resistivity measurements of highly texturized Bi nanowires with a diameter of ca. 100 nm and a length varying from 160 to 990 nm in a temperature range from 300 to 1.2 K.

2.
Chemphyschem ; 15(10): 2108-20, 2014 Jul 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24827429

RESUMEN

The mechanism of the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) on LaCoO(3) and La(0.8)Sr(0.2)MnO(3) perovskite oxides is studied in 1 M NaOH by using the rotating ring disc electrode (RRDE) method. By combining experimental studies with kinetic modeling, it was demonstrated that on perovskite, as well as on perovskite/carbon electrodes, the ORR follows a series pathway through the intermediate formation of hydrogen peroxide. The escape of this intermediate from the electrode strongly depends on: 1) The loading of perovskite; high loadings lead to an overall 4 e(-) oxygen reduction due to efficient hydrogen peroxide re-adsorption on the active sites and its further reduction. 2) The addition of carbon to the catalytic layer, which affects both the utilization of the perovskite surface and the production of hydrogen peroxide. 3) The type of oxide; La(0.8)Sr(0.2)MnO(3) displays higher (compared to LaCoO(3)) activity in the reduction of oxygen to hydrogen peroxide and in the reduction/oxidation of the latter.

3.
Chem Phys ; 412(C): 22-29, 2013 Feb 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23408115

RESUMEN

Lithium, sodium and potassium cryolite melts are probed by Raman spectroscopy in a wide range of the melt composition. The experimental data demonstrate a slight red shift of main peaks and a decrease of their half-widths in the row Li(+), Na(+), K(+). Quantum chemical modelling of the systems is performed at the density functional theory level. The ionic environment is found to play a crucial role in the energy of fluoroaluminates. Potential energy surfaces describing the formation/dissociation of certain complex species, as well as model Raman spectra are constructed and compared with those obtained recently for sodium containing cryolite melts (R.R. Nazmutdinov, et al., Spectrochim, Acta A 75 (2010) 1244.). The calculations show that the cation nature affects the geometry of the ionic associates as well as the equilibrium and kinetics of the complexation processes. This enables to interpret both original experimental data and those reported in literature.

4.
J Phys Chem B ; 113(30): 10277-84, 2009 Jul 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19580296

RESUMEN

Solvent dynamics effects on electroreduction of peroxodisulphate anion on mercury electrode (a typical bond breaking electron transfer reaction) are explored in the framework of the Sumi-Marcus model. The reaction three-dimensional free energy surface is constructed using the Anderson model Hamiltonian. A new interpretation of short- and long-time survival times is presented as well. Since the reduction is assumed to proceed from aqueous sucrose and glucose solutions of different concentrations (which are used to vary the solution viscosity), unavoidable changes in the Pekar factor (static effect) are also taken into account. The results of model calculations are employed to interpret challenging experimental data on nonmonotonous constant rate vs solution viscosity dependence reported earlier (in part, appearance of an ascent plot). The influence of mixed solvent composition on the reaction rate and transfer coefficient is explained in terms of the saddle point avoidance in the vicinity of activationless discharge. Splitting of the reaction coordinates into slow (solvent) and fast (intramolecular) ones is argued to be crucial, as the most important reaction features cannot be described by means of more simplified models, even if both static and dynamic effects are addressed.

5.
Inorg Chem ; 47(15): 6659-73, 2008 Aug 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18582034

RESUMEN

We present a combined experimental and computational approach to the modeling and prediction of reactivity in multistep processes of heterogeneous electron transfer. The approach is illustrated by the study of a Robson-type binuclear complex (-Cu(II)-Cu(II)-) undergoing four-electron reduction in aqueous media and water-acetonitrile mixtures. The observed effects of solvent, pH, buffer capacity, and supporting electrolyte are discussed in the framework of a general reaction scheme involving two main routes; one of them includes protonation of intermediate species. The main three problems are addressed on the basis of modern charge transfer theory: (1) the effect of the nature of reactant and intermediate species (protonated/deprotonated, bare or associated with supporting anion/solvent molecule) on the standard redox potential, the electronic transmission coefficient, and the intramolecular reorganization; (2) possible effect of protonation on the shape of the reaction free energy surfaces which are built using the Anderson Hamiltonian; (3) electron transfer across an adsorbed chloride anion. Quantum chemical calculations were performed at the density functional theory level.

6.
J Phys Chem B ; 110(31): 15633-9, 2006 Aug 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16884288

RESUMEN

The polyoxometalate (NH(4))(6)H(2)(CeMo(12)O(42)).9H(2)O (abbreviated as Ce(IV)Mo(12)) was synthesized, and its Ce(III) form was obtained by exhaustive electrochemical reduction. Both forms are fairly stable in pH 0.0 media. This stability decreases when the pH increases. The Ce(IV) species, in which the central metal is in the f(0) electronic configuration, is found to fluoresce, a feature that is only straightforwardly explained with the Ce(III) state. As the results of a series of experiments converge to confirm the stability of Ce(IV)Mo(12) in the media studied, a suggested rationale is that the emission originates from a higher-energy ligand-to-metal charge transfer and follows a scheme which is ultimately equivalent to the classical metal-centered fluorescence of Ce(III). Detailed studies of the influences of pH and ionic strength were carried out and suggest that protonated and/or ion-paired assemblies are the fluorescent species. A reproducible increase of the fluorescence intensity of Ce(IV)Mo(12) as a function of time was also observed.

7.
J Phys Chem B ; 115(4): 668-77, 2011 Feb 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21155587

RESUMEN

The two-step electrochemical reduction of tetrachloro-1,2-benzoquinone (chloranil), 2-methyl-1,2-benzoquinone (toluquinone), and 9,10-anthraquinone in two room-temperature ionic liquids is addressed by means of voltammetry on a platinum electrode. For the subsequent quinone/radical anion (Q/Q(•-)) and radical anion/dianion (Q(•-)/Q(2-)) redox reactions, the experimental data on formal potentials in 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium tetrafluoroborate ([C(4)mim][BF(4)]) and 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate ([C(4)mim][PF(6)]) and literature data for the same reactants in various aprotic molecular solvents are considered in the framework of a common potential sequence (Fc(+)/Fc scale) and compared with solvation energies computed at various levels. For the Q/Q(•-) couple, the agreement appeared to be satisfactory when solvation is described at the polarized continuum model (PCM) level. In contrast, for the Q(•-)/Q(2-) couple, the account for specific solvation at the molecular level is crucial.

8.
J Phys Chem B ; 114(1): 311-20, 2010 Jan 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20000826

RESUMEN

The influence of solvent dielectric relaxation on the rate of electron transfer (ET) at an electrochemical interface is addressed using both experiment and model calculations. Water-ethylene glycol (EG) mixtures were chosen as the solvent because their optical permittivity remains practically constant over the entire composition range. This allows observation of the dynamic solvent effect with a very minor interference from the static solvent properties (being typically of opposite sign). Three groups of experimental results are presented to characterize the mixed-solvent system (dielectric spectra in the frequency range 0.1-89 GHz), the mercury/solvent interface (electrocapillary data), and the ET kinetics (dc polarography of peroxodisulphate reduction). To extract the true solvent influence on the electron transfer elementary step, the results from dc polarography are corrected for interfacial effects with the help of the electrocapillary data. An anomalous dependence of the ET rate on EG content (i.e., nonmonotonic dependence of the ET rate on macroscopic viscosity) can be inferred after all corrections. The interplay of different solvent modes is suggested to be responsible for the observed features of ET kinetics. A possible interpretation of the corrected ET rate in the framework of the Agmon-Hopfield formalism is proposed, where the dielectric spectra of the mixed solvent are modeled by a superposition of three Debye equations. The results demonstrate that the observed anomalous "viscosity effect" may be explained qualitatively by an increased contribution of the fast relaxation mode at high EG contents.

9.
Spectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc ; 75(4): 1244-52, 2010 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20149721

RESUMEN

The structure of sodium cryolite melts was studied using Raman spectroscopy and quantum chemical calculations performed at the density functional theory level. The existence of bridged forms in the melts was argued first from the analysis of experimental Raman spectra. In the quantum chemical modelling emphasis was put on the construction of potential energy surfaces describing the formation/dissociation of certain complex species. Effects of the ionic environment were found to play a crucial role in the energetics of model processes. The structure of the simplest possible polymeric forms involving two Al centres linked through F atoms ("dimers") was thoroughly investigated. The calculated equilibrium constants and model Raman spectra yield additional evidence in favour of the dimers. This agrees with a self-consistent analysis of a series of Raman spectra for a wide range of the melt composition.


Asunto(s)
Aluminio/química , Simulación por Computador , Fluoruro de Sodio/química , Sodio/química , Temperatura de Transición , Dimerización , Iones , Cinética , Modelos Químicos , Conformación Molecular , Espectrometría Raman , Propiedades de Superficie , Vibración
10.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 10(17): 2390-8, 2008 May 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18414730

RESUMEN

The multistep reduction of a binuclear Ni(ii) Robson-type complex with a multidentate template-like organic ligand (formed from 4-tert-butyl-2,6-diformylphenol and 1,3-diaminopropane), Ni(2)L, is studied using the electron photoemission technique. The number of transferred electrons corresponding to a single reduction wave is found to be 8 per complex species. This value is attributed to both complete Ni(ii) reduction (with Ni metal formation) and ligand reduction. Contributions of Ni(ii) and ligand to acceptor orbital were estimated. Three initial subsequent steps correspond to electron transfer to mixed metal-ligand orbital with comparable contributions. For more deep reduction, ligand contribution predominates. The first single-electron step is evidenced to be rate-determining, with the rate constant of 0.03 cm(2) s(-1). The latter value is discussed in the framework of a semiquantitative analysis of the rate constants estimated in the framework of quantum-mechanical electron transfer theory for different orientations of Ni(2)L in the reaction layer. The analysis includes estimations of key kinetic parameters (electronic transmission coefficient, solvent- and intramolecular contributions to the total reorganization energy) which strongly rest on the results of quantum chemical modeling. The transmission coefficients at realistic electrode-reactant distances of the closest approach are below 0.001. This means that despite of the noticeable delocalization of Ni(2)L acceptor orbital, the electron transfer is diabatic. Predominating contribution to reorganization energy results from solvent and does not exceed 0.5 eV for any reactant orientation. The highest reactivity is predicted for a planar orientation located mostly outside the compact part of electric double layer. The Ni(2)L adsorption in planar and vertical orientations on mercury is addressed as well. The results give a clear explanation of the previously observed self-inhibition of "dark" reduction of Ni(2)L on mercury and independent data on the adsorption of these species. The discovered combination of various orientation effects is compared with effects observed for other reactants.


Asunto(s)
Diaminas/química , Níquel/química , Compuestos Organometálicos/química , Fenoles/química , Simulación por Computador , Electroquímica , Cinética , Ligandos , Modelos Químicos , Teoría Cuántica
11.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 9(40): 5476-89, 2007 Oct 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17925974

RESUMEN

PtRu (1:1) catalysts supported on low surface area carbon of the Sibunit family (S(BET) = 72 m(2) g(-1)) with a metal percentage ranging from 5 to 60% are prepared and tested in a CO monolayer and for methanol oxidation in H(2)SO(4) electrolyte. At low metal percentage small (<2 nm) alloy nanoparticles, uniformly distributed on the carbon surface, are formed. As the amount of metal per unit surface area of carbon increases, particles start coalescing and form first quasi two-dimensional, and then three-dimensional metal nanostructures. This results in a strong enhancement of specific catalytic activity in methanol oxidation and a decrease of the overpotential for CO monolayer oxidation. It is suggested that intergrain boundaries connecting crystalline domains in nanostructured PtRu catalysts produced at high metal-on-carbon loadings provide active sites for electrocatalytic processes.

12.
J Phys Chem A ; 109(7): 1348-56, 2005 Feb 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16833451

RESUMEN

The effect of charge distribution within Cr(III) and Eu(III) aquacomplexes on the kinetics of simple electron-transfer reactions at electrodes is considered. The construction of corrected Tafel plots using noninteger effective charges for the reactant and product estimated on the basis of quantum-chemical data was shown to be more reasonable than the traditional approach in which integer charges are assumed. The potential distribution near the electrode has been estimated both by the Gouy-Chapman model and from Monte Carlo simulations for 1-1 supporting electrolytes. Kinetic parameters obtained using the two approaches are compared.

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