Quantitative description of reaction mechanisms in aqueous phase electrochemistry requires experimental characterization of local water structure at the electrode/aqueous interface and its evolution with changing potential. Gaining such insight experimentally under electrochemical conditions is a formidable task. The potential-dependent structure of a subpopulation of interfacial water with one OH group pointing towards a gold working electrode is characterized using interface specific vibrational spectroscopy in a thin film electrochemical cell. Such free-OH groups are the molecular level observable of an extended hydrophobic interface. This free-OH interacts only weakly with the Au surface at all potentials, has an orientational distribution that narrows approaching the potential of zero charge, and disappears on oxidation of the gold electrode.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anie.201612183DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

electrode/aqueous interface
8
hydrophobic water
4
water probed
4
probed experimentally
4
experimentally gold
4
gold electrode/aqueous
4
interface
4
interface quantitative
4
quantitative description
4
description reaction
4

Similar Publications

Infrared Spectroscopic Observation of Oxo- and Superoxo-Intermediates in the Water Oxidation Cycle of a Molecular Ir Catalyst.

J Am Chem Soc

January 2024

Department of Chemistry, Merkert Chemistry Center, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts 02467, United States.

Article Synopsis
  • - Molecular Ir catalysts are key for studying water oxidation, crucial for making renewable fuels, and previous research focused primarily on how active species emerge from their precursors.
  • - This study investigates the catalytic cycle of a specific Ir catalyst known as the "blue dimer" using advanced techniques like SEIRAS and PSD to analyze its behavior at an electrode/electrolyte interface.
  • - Findings reveal that two important intermediates, oxo (Ir═O) and superoxo (Ir-OO), can be identified and their relative abundance can be manipulated based on the reaction's thermodynamic conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Water dynamics and sum-frequency generation spectra at electrode/aqueous electrolyte interfaces.

Faraday Discuss

February 2024

PASTEUR, Department of Chemistry, École normale supérieure, PSL University, Sorbonne Université, CNRS, 75005 Paris, France.

The dynamics of water at interfaces between an electrode and an electrolyte is essential for the transport of redox species and for the kinetics of charge transfer reactions next to the electrode. However, while the effects of electrode potential and ion concentration on the electric double layer structure have been extensively studied, a comparable understanding of dynamical aspects is missing. Interfacial water dynamics presents challenges since it is expected to result from the complex combination of water-water, water-electrode and water-ion interactions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Substrate effect on charging of electrified graphene/water interfaces.

Faraday Discuss

February 2024

Molecular Spectroscopy Department, Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research, Ackermannweg 10, 55128 Mainz, Germany.

Graphene, a transparent two-dimensional (2D) conductive electrode, has brought extensive new perspectives and prospects to electrochemical systems, such as chemical sensors, energy storage, and energy conversion devices. In many of these applications, graphene, supported on a substrate, is in contact with an aqueous solution. An increasing number of studies indicate that the substrate, rather than graphene, determines the organization of water in contact with graphene, , the electric double layer (EDL) structure near the electrified graphene, and the wetting behavior of the graphene: the graphene sheet is transparent in terms of its supporting substrate.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Water is an integral component in electrochemistry, in the generation of the electric double layer, and in the propagation of the interfacial electric fields into the solution; however, probing the molecular-level structure of interfacial water near functioning electrode surfaces remains challenging. Due to the surface-specificity, sum-frequency-generation (SFG) spectroscopy offers an opportunity to investigate the structure of water near working electrochemical interfaces but probing the hydrogen-bonded structure of water at this buried electrode-electrolyte interface was thought to be impossible. Propagating the laser beams through the solvent leads to a large attenuation of the infrared light due to the absorption of water, and interrogating the interface by sending the laser beams through the electrode normally obscures the SFG spectra due to the large nonlinear response of conduction band electrons.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Molecular-level insight into interfacial water at a buried electrode interface is essential in electrochemistry, but spectroscopic probing of the interface remains challenging. Here, using surface-specific heterodyne-detected sum-frequency generation (HD-SFG) spectroscopy, we directly access the interfacial water in contact with the graphene electrode supported on calcium fluoride (CaF ). We find phase transition-like variations of the HD-SFG spectra vs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!