4.7 Article

An automated and lightweight framework for electrolyte diagnostics using quantitative microelectrode voltammetry

Journal

JOURNAL OF ELECTROANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 947, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.jelechem.2023.117689

Keywords

Microelectrode voltammetry; Simulation; In -situ diagnostics; Feature estimation; State -of -charge; State -of -health

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Voltammetry is a widely used method in electrochemical technology to evaluate the behavior of electrolyte solutions. It allows for rapid estimation of the state-of-charge and state-of-health of electrolyte solutions by simulating the entire voltammogram. This method shows potential for advancing diagnostic methods in operating electrochemical devices.
Voltammetry is a ubiquitous electroanalytical method that can be used to help probe sustainable electrochemical technologies. When conducted with a microelectrode (radius ca. mu m), voltammetry enables special interrogation of electrolyte solutions by minimizing distortions and facilitating near-steady-state measurements. Methodolo-gies aimed to evaluate the behavior of redox-active species often leverage well-established, physically-grounded expressions that can be extended to examine electrolyte solutions under non-ideal conditions (e.g., signal convolution from multiple redox events) by simulating the entire voltammogram. To characterize these analyte systems, we first develop closed-form expressions-building on previous work that utilizes oblate spheroidal coordinates-and establish a framework for rapidly evaluating electrolyte composition. We subsequently apply finite difference transient voltammogram models to assess the performance of this workflow. We then validate our findings using model, deterministically-prepared nonaqueous electrolyte solutions containing N-[2-(methoxyethoxy)ethyl]phenothiazine. Overall, we show the toolkit is particularly adept at rapidly (< 1 min) estimating the degree to which an electrolyte solution is charged (its state-of-charge) and remains intact (its state-of-health). Finally, we highlight potential extensions of this method towards advancing in situ or operando diagnostic methods within operating electrochemical devices.

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