Identification of Electrochemically Adsorbed Species via Electrochemical Microcalorimetry: Sulfate Adsorption on Au(111)

Abstract

We investigate compositional changes of an electrochemical interface upon polarization with electrochemical microcalorimetry. From the heat exchanged at a Au(111) electrode upon sulfate adsorption, we determine the reaction entropy of the adsorption process for both neutral and acidic solutions, where the dominant species in solution changes from SO4_42^{2−} to HSO4_4^{−}. In neutral solution, the reaction entropy is about 40 J mol1^{−1} K1^{−1} more positive than that in acidic solution over the complete sulfate adsorption region. This entropy offset is explicable by a deprotonation step of HSO4_4^{−} preceding sulfate adsorption in acidic solution, which shows that the adsorbing species is SO4_4* in both solutions. The observed overall variation of the reaction entropy in the sulfate adsorption region of ca. 80 J mol1^{−1} K1^{−1} indicates significant sulfate-coverage dependent entropic contributions to the Free Enthalpy of the surface system

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