17 research outputs found
Localised electrochemical impedance spectroscopy with high lateral resolution by means of alternating current scanning eletrochemical microscopy
A new method for measuring local interfacial impedance properties with high lateral resolution was developed by combination of electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) with scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM). Alternating current scanning electrochemical microscopy (AC-SECM) allowed to identify and visualise microscopic domains of different conductivity/electrochemical activities on solid/liquid interfaces immersed into an electrolyte. The performance of the method was illustrated by imaging an array of Pt-band microelectrodes in solutions of low conductivity in the absence of any redox mediator. © 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved
Active sites for outer-sphere, inner-sphere, and complex multistage electrochemical reactions at polycrystalline boron-doped diamond electrodes (pBDD) revealed with scanning electrochemical cell microscopy (SECCM)
The local rate of heterogeneous electron transfer (HET) at polycrystalline boron-doped diamond (pBDD) electrodes has been visualized at high spatial resolution for various aqueous electrochemical reactions, using scanning electrochemical cell microscopy (SECCM), which is a technique that uses a mobile pipet-based electrochemical cell as an imaging probe. As exemplar systems, three important classes of electrode reactions have been investigated: outer-sphere (one-electron oxidation of ferrocenylmethyltrimethylammonium (FcTMA+)), inner-sphere (one-electron oxidation of Fe2+), and complex processes with coupled electron transfer and chemical reactions (oxidation of serotonin). In all cases, the pattern of reactivity is similar: the entire pBDD surface is electroactive, but there are variations in activity between different crystal facets which correlate directly with differences in the local dopant level, as visualized qualitatively by field-emission scanning electron microscopy (FE-SEM). No evidence was found for enhanced activity at grain boundaries for any of the reactions. The case of serotonin oxidation is particularly interesting, as this process is known to lead to deterioration of the electrodes, because of blocking by reaction products, and therefore cannot be studied with conventional scanning electrochemical probe microscopy (SEPM) techniques. Yet, we have found this system nonproblematic to study, because the meniscus of the scanning pipet is only in contact with the surface investigated for a brief time and any blocking product is left behind as the pipet moves to a new location. Thus, SECCM opens up the possibility of investigating and visualizing much more complex heterogeneous electrode reactions than possible presently with other SEPM techniques