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Published July 1991 | public
Journal Article

Application of scanning electrochemical microscopy to generation/collection experiments with high collection efficiency

Abstract

The technique of scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM) was introduced by Bard and co-workers (1) who have utilized it in a variety of experiments (2). The use of a microelectrode placed close to a substrate electrode to detect electroactive products generated at the latter, as described by Engstrom and co-workers (3,4),is one attractive application of the SECM technique (1). In previous studies, this type of generation/detection experiment has usually been carried out with the microelectrode used as the detector electrode (1-5). In the present study, a larger (100 µm diameter) substrate electrode is used to detect and collect electrode reaction products generated at a microtip electrode positioned at various distances above the substrate electrode. The collection efficiency (in the sense employed for rotating ring-disk electrodes (6)) of such an arrangement is virtually 100% at easily achievable separation distances. The advantages of carrying out generation/collection experiments with the present apparatus are exemplified with some simple experimental systems. Comparisons with similar recent experiments in which arrays of microband electrodes are utilized (7,8) are also provided.

Additional Information

© 1991 American Chemical Society. Received for review January 14, 1991. Accepted April 18, 1991. This work was supported by the National Science Foundation. This is Contribution No. 8379 from the Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering.

Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 17, 2023