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Published January 1959 | public
Journal Article

On the theory of electrochemical and chemical electron transfer processes

Abstract

Kinetic studies of simple electron transfer systems in solution and at electrodes have revealed a number of interesting and simplifying features. The chemical reactions also represent one of the very few cases in kinetics where it has been possible to make reasonable calculations of the absolute rate constant without introducing adjustable parameters or arbitrary assumptions. Because of their comparative simplicity, these processes also serve as a useful kinetic tool for investigating ion–solvent–electrode interactions. In the present paper the writer's recent theoretical investigations are summarized and used to interpret data obtained from both solution and electrode studies. Various phenomena are discussed in the light of this theory and several predictions of behavior are made. The topics considered include effects of changing the overpotential or the standard free energy of reaction, the ionic structure, temperature, salt concentration, solvent, and electrode material. Both the parallelism between chemical and electrochemical transfers and the role played by the electrostatic image in the latter case are discussed. A classification of reactants is employed throughout, based in part on differences in the theoretical treatment.

Additional Information

© 1959 National Research Council Canada. Manuscript received July 6, 1958. This paper was presented at the Symposium on Charge Transfer Processes held at the University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, September 4 and 5, 1958. The writer is pleased to acknowledge the support of this research by the Office of Naval Research and by the National Science Foundation.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023