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Electroanalytical Chemistry. Gary A. MabbottЧитать онлайн книгу.

Electroanalytical Chemistry - Gary A. Mabbott


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between two different phases. In potentiometric experiments, interesting processes give rise to a separation of charge at the boundary between the sample and sensor; in voltammetric experiments an outside power source applies a voltage to the working electrode creating a separation of charge that drives interesting processes there. It is common for charges to appear at many different phase boundaries in nature, for example, at the surface of biological cell walls, on the surface of water droplets or solid aerosols, and at the surface of wet materials such as ceramics, clays, sediments, and soils. The same electrochemical principles that are involved in electrochemical analysis drive lots of natural phenomena as well. One of the most important concepts that is universal is the boundary between two phases where charges accumulate. It is called the electrified interface or the electrical double layer.

      1.4.1 Structure of the Double Layer

      There are numerous electrochemical sensors that selectively respond to a specific chemical species of interest. For example, fluoride is routinely monitored in municipal drinking water by fluoride selective electrodes. Lithium ion can be determined in the blood or urine of a patient being treated for depression by lithium‐containing medications using a lithium ion selective electrode. These devices are popular because of their simplicity of use and their reliability. The increasing interest in monitoring select chemical species in clinical, environmental, industrial settings and, more recently, in private homes and for personal health monitoring is likely to encourage the development and implementation of even more sensors of this type.

      (1.18)equation

The Helmholtz model of the electrified boundary between a metal surface (dark spheres) with a net negative charge and an aqueous salt solution.

      (1.19)equation

The inner Helmholtz plane (IHP) is a plane parallel to the electrode drawn through the center of ions or neutral molecules adsorbed directly in contact with the electrode surface. (a) Gouy–Chapman model of electrical double layer showing a diffuse region of excess charge on the solution side. (b) The excess concentration drops off exponentially with distance from the electrode surface.
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