29 research outputs found
Development of a 3-electrode system for gas phase dynamic electrochemistry
The principles of potentiometry from liquid phase electrochemistry have already
been applied to the gas phase by considering a flame as an ionised gaseous
environment which can behave as a dilute electrolyte. This study focused on the
design, construction and optimisation of a 3-electrode electrochemical cell for
direct electron transfer in the gas phase. Three electrochemical cells were
developed with the final design deemed satisfactory to conduct electrochemical
measurements. Particular attention was given to the development of the reference
electrode, which allows for stable voltage measurements. The reference
electrodes analysed for their voltage stability and polarisability were metal wires,
a dynamic type electrode and metal / metal oxide powders packed into ceramic
supports. Through extensive studies, titanium wire (which forms a solid oxide
layer once placed in the flame) was deemed to behave as a stable reference
electrode. In conjunction with the electrode assembly and the titanium metal wire
reference electrode, two metal salt clusters were individually introduced into the
flame. The metal salt clusters were characterised by their reproducible
electrochemical responses through cyclic voltammetry. Three negative peaks
were observed when ammonium molybdate tetrahydrate was introduced into the
flame. In contrast, four negative peaks were observed (at different voltage
positions) when the metal salt cluster was replaced with ammonium
metatungstate hydrate. The results suggest that electroreduction is indeed
possible in the gas phase with reproducible Faradaic current responses being
observed. The results are well supported by unambiguous correlation of the
reduction potentials for peaks observed for the metal salt clusters to the vertical
electron detachment energies obtained from photoelectron emission
spectroscopy. The developed electrochemical cell and technique can be used to
further characterise other chemical compounds
Information Asymmetry, Financialisation and Financial Access
This study investigates whether information sharing channels that are meant to reduce information asymmetry have led to an increase in financial access. The study employs a Generalised Method of Moments technique using data from 53 African countries during the period from 2004-2011 to examine this linkage. Information sharing channels are theoretically designed to promote the formal financial sector and discourage the informal financial sector. The study uses two information sharing channels: private credit bureaus and public credit registries. The study found that both information sharing channels have a positive and significant impact on financial access. The study also found that public credit registries complement the formal financial sector to promote financial access. The policy implications are discussed
Plasma electrochemistry: development of a reference electrode material for high temperature plasma.
This report describes the development of a high temperature reference electrode material for gas phase electrochemistry investigations. The electrode is constructed by careful assessment of different metal/metal oxide materials and operational stability in flame electrolyte medium. This will enable reliable dynamic electrochemistry investigations into redox reactions at the solid/gas interface, free of any solvent defined potential window restrictions