Title: SS902 ADVANCED ELECTROCHEMISTRY
1SS902 ADVANCED ELECTROCHEMISTRY
- Murali Rangarajan
- Department of Chemical Engineering
- Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham
- Ettimadai
2ELECTRODICS
3Faradaic Processes
- Two types of processes take place at electrode
- Faradaic Processes
- Non-Faradaic Processes
- Faradaic processes involve electrochemical redox
reactions, where charges (ex. electrons or ions)
are transferred across the electrode-electrolyte
interface - This charge transfer is governed by Faradays
laws - Faradays First Law The amount of substance
undergoing an electrochemical reaction at the
electrode-electrolyte interface is directly
proportional to the amount of electricity
(charge) that passes through the electrode and
electrolyte
4Faradays First Law
- Every non-quantum process has a rate, a driving
force and a resistance to the process offered by
the system where the process takes place - They are related to each other
- Reaction rate is given by
- Here, j is current density, z is the number of
electrons transferred and F is Faradays constant
96487 C/mol - Problem A 30cm ? 20cm aluminum sheet is anodized
on both sides in a sulfuric acid bath. (Thickness
may be ignored for calculation of area.) at 3
A/dm2 for 1 hour at 30 efficiency. Density of
aluminum is 2.7 g/cm3. Calculate the thickness of
anodic film. The atomic weight of aluminum is 27.
5Non-Faradaic Processes
- Non-Faradaic processes are those that occur at
the electrode-electrolyte interface but do not
involve transfer of electrons across the
interface - Adsorption/Desorption of ions and molecules on
the electrode surface - These can be driven by change in potential or
solution composition - They alter the structure of the
electrode-electrolyte interface, thus changing
the interfacial resistance to charge transfer - Although charge transfer does not take place,
external currents can flow (at least transiently)
when the potential, electrode area, or solution
composition changes
6Non-Faradaic Processes
- Both faradaic and non-faradaic processes occur at
the interface when electrochemical reactions
occur - Though only Faradaic processes may be of
interest, the non-Faradaic processes can affect
the electrochemical reactions significantly - For instance, additives are used in
electroplating which adsorb on electrode surface,
increases resistance to deposition, resulting in
smoother deposits - So we first examine the structure of the
electrode-electrolyte interface and the
non-faradaic processes that happen there
7Electrical Double Layer
- Electrode-electrochemical interface may be
thought of as a capacitor when voltage is
applied to it - A parallel-plate capacitor stores charges by
polarization of the two plates (due to applied
voltage/other driving forces molecular
structure of the medium in between)
The metal-solution interface as a capacitor with
a charge on the metal, qM, (a) negative and (b)
positive
Charging a capacitor with a battery
8Electrical Double Layer
- The metal side of the double layer acquires
either positive or negative charge depending on
whether the electrode is an anode or a cathode - The solution side of the double layer is thought
to be made up of several layers - That closest to the electrode, the inner layer,
contains solvent molecules and sometimes other
species (ions or molecules) that are said to be
specifically adsorbed - This inner layer is called the Helmholtz or Stern
layer - The total charge density from specifically
adsorbed ions in this inner layer is ? i - The locus of the electrical centers of the
specifically adsorbed ions is called the inner
Helmholtz plane (IHP)
9Electrical Double Layer
- Solvated ions can approach the metal only till
before the IHP - The locus of centers of these nearest solvated
ions is called the outer Helmholtz plane (OHP) - The interaction of the solvated ions with the
charged metal involves only long-range
electrostatic forces, so that their interaction
is essentially independent of the chemical
properties of the ions - These ions are said to be nonspecifically
adsorbed - Because of thermal agitation in the solution, the
nonspecifically adsorbed ions are distributed in
a 3-D region called the diffuse layer, which
extends from the OHP into the bulk of the solution
10Electrical Double Layer
- The excess charge density in the diffuse layer is
?d, hence the total excess charge density on the
solution side of the double layer, ?s, is given by
The thickness of the diffuse layer depends on the
total ionic concentration in the solution for
concentrations greater than 10?2 M, the thickness
is less than 100 A?
Potential profile across interface
11Measuring Double Layer Properties
- Use a cell consisting of an ideal polarizable
electrode (IPE) and an ideal reversible electrode
(IRE)
Two-electrode cell with an ideal polarized
mercury drop electrode and an SCE
This cell does not undergo any Faradaic
processes, so only double-layer properties are
measured
Resistances in the IPE-IRE cell
12Electrochemical Cells
- Common cells are two-electrode and
three-electrode cells - Refer to Bard and Faulkner pp. 24-28 for their
description - Prepare short notes on both two-electrode and
three-electrode cells
13Electrochemical Experiments
- A number of electrochemical experiments may be
performed with an electrochemical cell - There are three main properties of
electrochemical systems that may be measured - Voltage
- Current
- Impedance or Resistance
- Some of them are
- Potential Step Experiments
- Current Step Experiments
- Potential Sweep (Voltage Ramp) Experiments
- Electrochemical Impedance Spectroscopy
14Electrochemical Experiments
- In each of these experiments, a predefined
perturbation of one of the properties is applied
on the system - One of the other properties is measured as a
response - From these responses, both Faradaic and
Non-Faradaic processes, their rates and
resistances may be studied
Experiment Perturbed Variable Measured Variable
Potential Step Voltage Current
Current Step Current Voltage
Potential Sweep Voltage Current
Impedance Spectroscopy Voltage Impedance
15Potential Step Experiments
The current response for a potential step is
- There is an exponentially decaying current
having a time constant ? RsCd. - Peak Current E/Rs.
16Current Step Experiments
The voltage response for a current step is
- Potential increases linearly with time
- The initial jump in the potential is iRs.
- Slope is i/Cd.
17Potential Sweep Experiments
The current response for a linear voltage ramp E
?t is
- The time constant for current is ? RsCd.
- The limiting current (maximum current) is ?Cd.
18Potential Sweep Experiments
- A triangular wave is a ramp whose sweep rate
switches from ? to ? at some potential, E?. - The steady-state current changes from ?Cd during
the - forward (increasing E) scan to ?Cd during the
reverse (decreasing E) scan
19Faradaic Processes
- When charger-transfer reactions (Faradaic
processes) take place in an electrochemical cell,
the driving force for the reactions is the
departure in the voltage from the equilibrium
voltage of the cell - This departure of voltage from the equilibrium
voltage of the cell is termed as overpotential - The rate of the reaction must be proportional to
the driving force - Therefore there must be a relationship between
the overpotential and the Faradaic current - Current-potential curves, particularly those
measured under steady-state, are termed
polarization curves
20Polarizable Vs. Non-Polarizable
- An ideal polarizable electrode is one that shows
a very large change in voltage for the passage of
an infinitesimal current - An ideal non-polarizable electrode is one that
shows a very large change in current for an
infinitesimal overpotential
21What Affects Polarization?
- Consider the overall electrochemical reaction
- A dissolved oxidized species, O, is converted to
a reduced form, R, also in solution - There are a number of steps that are involved in
the overall electrochemical reaction - The rate of electrochemical reaction is
determined by the slowest, i.e., rate-determining
step - Each step will contribute to the overpotential
(polarization) - The overpotential needed for a certain reaction
rate will largely be determined by the
rate-determining step - Equally, the rate constants of the different
steps will also be dependent on the potential
22Steps in Electrochemical Rxn
- The following steps are involved in an
electrochemical rxn - Mass transfer (e.g., of ? from the bulk solution
to the electrode surface). - Electron transfer at the electrode surface.
- Chemical reactions preceding or following the
electron transfer. These might be homogeneous
processes (e.g., protonation or dimerization) or
heterogeneous ones (e.g., catalytic
decomposition) on the electrode surface. - Other surface reactions, such as adsorption,
desorption, or crystallization (electrodeposition)
.
23Steps in Electrochemical Rxn
24Overpotential
- The driving force for an electrochemical reaction
is the overpotential - This driving force is used up by all the steps in
the electrochemical reaction - Thus an applied overpotential may be broken into
- Mass transfer overpotential
- Charge transfer overpotential
- Reaction (Chemical) overpotential
- Adsorption/Desorption overpotential
- Correspondingly, the resistance offered to the
passage of current may be viewed as sum of a
series of resistances
25Electrode Kinetics
- Consider the reversible charge transfer redox
reaction taking place at an electrode-electrolyte
interface - Let the rate constants be kf and kr respectively
for the forward and the reverse reactions - In the limit of thermodynamic equilibrium, the
potential established at the electrode-electrolyte
interface is given by the Nernst equation - Here CO and CR are bulk concentrations, z is
the number of electrons transferred, E0 is the
formal potential
26Tafel Equation
- Without derivations, we present the rate
equations (relating current-overpotential) - It is important to recall that a number of
factors (including interfacial electron transfer
kinetics) that determine the overall rate of an
electrochemical reaction - When the current is low and the system is
well-stirred, mass transfer of reactants to the
interface is not the rate-limiting step - At such conditions, adsorption/desorption are
also not usually rate-limiting - The reaction rate is determined mainly by
charge-transfer kinetics governed by Tafel
Equation
27Tafel Equation
28Butler-Volmer Equation
- The exponential relationship between current
density and overpotential, observed
experimentally by Tafel, is an important result
and is true for more general cases as well - For a one-step (only charge transfer resistance
in a single step), one-electron process, the
general rate equation is - Here i is current, A is area of the electrode, F
is Faradays constant, k0 is the standard rate
constant (at eqbm), CO(0,t) CR(0,t) are
instantaneous concentrations of O R at the
electrode surface, ? is the transfer coefficient,
f is F/RT, E0 is a reference potential
29Standard Rate Constant
- The standard rate constant k0 It is the measure
of the kinetic facility of a redox couple. A
system with a large k0 will achieve equilibrium
on a short time scale, but a system with small k0
will be sluggish - Values of k0 reported in the literature for
electrochemical reactions vary from about 10 cm/s
for redox of aromatic hydrocarbons such as
anthracene to about 10?9 cm/s for reduction of
proton to molecular hydrogen - So electrochemistry deals with a range of more
than 10 orders of magnitude in kinetic reactivity - Another way to approach equilibrium is by
applying a large potential E relative to E0. - Both of these together are represented by the
term exchange current
30Exchange Current
- Exchange current is the current transferred
between the forward and the reverse reactions at
equilibrium they are equal at equilibrium and
the net current is zero - CO is the concentration of species O at
equilibrium - The exchange current density values for two
electrochemical reactions are 1 ? 109 and 1 ?
103 A/cm2. How do they reflect on Tafel plot,
all other parameters being constant? - No effect on b only on a
- One with larger i0 needs lesser overpotential to
achieve same current or rate of the reaction
31Exchange Current
32Butler-Volmer Equation
- In terms of exchange current and overpotential,
Butler-Volmer equation is represented as - First term denotes cathodic contribution and the
second denotes anodic contribution - Ratio of concentrations is a measure of effects
of mass transfer they govern how much reactants
are supplied to the electrode - In the absence of mass transfer effects (CO(0)
CO always), the current-overpotential
relationship is given by
33Limiting Current
- Now let us look at the other extreme where the
electron transfer is extremely fast compared to
mass transfer - Therefore the current (rate of charge transfer)
is entirely governed by the rate at which the
reacting species (say, O) is brought to the
electrode surface - This rate of mass transfer is proportional to the
concentration difference of O between the bulk
and the interface, i.e., CO ? CO(0) - The proportionality constant is termed as mass
transfer coefficient k - This is equal to the electrochemical reaction
rate il/nF - Here il is called the limiting current the
maximum current when the process is
mass-transfer-limited
34Butler-Volmer Equation
Note Butler-Volmer equation is not valid under
mass-transfer-limited conditions
Note For small ?, i increases linearly with ?
For medium ?, Tafel behavior is seen For large
?, i is independent of ? limiting current
? 0.5, T 298 K, il,c ? il,a il, and i0/il
0.2. Dashed lines show the component currents
ic and ia.
35Exchange Current Overpotential
- Therefore the regime where Butler-Volmer equation
is valid is the charge-transfer-limiting regime - Here, most of the driving force is spent in
overcoming the activation energy barrier of the
charge transfer process - Therefore, the overpotential in this regime is
termed activation overpotential - We have already seen that for sluggish redox
kinetics, the exchange current must be small
Small i0 ? ? Activation overpotential - On the other hand, when the exchange current is
very large, even for very small overpotentials,
the current approaches the limiting current,
i.e., since charge transfer is very fast, mass
transfer to the electrode becomes rate-limiting - In such conditions, Large i0 ? ? Concentration
overpotential
36Transfer Coefficient
- The second parameter in the Butler-Volmer
equation is transfer coefficient ? - Transfer coefficient determines the symmetry of
the current-overpotential curves - For the cathodic term, the exponential term is
multiplied by ? while for the anodic term the
multiplying factor is (1 ? ?) - If ? 0.5, both cathodic and anodic behavior of
the electrode will be symmetric - If ? gt 0.5, the system is likely to behave a
better cathode (since more cathodic currents are
achieved for smaller overpotentials) - If ? lt 0.5, the system is likely to behave a
better anode (since more anodic currents are
achieved for smaller overpotentials)
37Transfer Coefficient