4.6 Article

Thermodynamic evidence for K+-SO42- ion pair formation on Pt(111). New insight into cation specific adsorption

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 12, Issue 38, Pages 12146-12152

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c0cp00247j

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Funding

  1. European Commission
  2. Generalitat Valenciana [PROMETEO/2009/045]

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This work contributes to the understanding of cation specific effects on platinum electrochemistry by means of a thorough thermodynamic analysis of potassium adsorption on Pt(111) in sulfuric acid solutions. It is concluded that potassium specific adsorption is better described as the adsorption of the K+-SO42- 4 ion pair. From the evaluation of the potassium sulfate concentration, it is found that potassium specific adsorption only takes place in the presence of coadsorbed sulfate species. Within the main sulfate adsorption state, for similar to 0.3 V < E < similar to 0.4 V (vs. SHE), the extent of potassium specific adsorption is small, reaching similar to 0.1 x 10(14) species per cm(2) for c(K+) > 0.1 M. Then, at higher potentials, E > 0.55 V (vs. SHE), a second potassium adsorption process takes place, concomitant with the second sulfate adsorption process (associated to the small voltammetric feature called the hump''). This last process involves the adsorption of an equal amount of potassium and sulfate species, leading to the adsorption of similar to 0.5 x 10(14) ion pair species per cm(2) (similar to 0.03 ion pair species per platinum surface atom). Furthermore, the results of the formal partial charge numbers corroborate that potassium adsorption involves sulfate cooperative coadsorption, in such a way that the effective adsorbing species is anionic, rather than cationic. In conclusion, this work evidences that cation specific effects may originate from the formation of surface ion pairs, which is probably related to the presence of ion pairs in solution.

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