(667c) Utilizing Open Circuit Potential Decay to Track Consumption of Reactive Surface Intermediates during Electrochemical Alkene Epoxidations
AIChE Annual Meeting
2024
2024 AIChE Annual Meeting
Catalysis and Reaction Engineering Division
Electrocatalysis IV: Organic Electrosynthesis
Thursday, October 31, 2024 - 1:06pm to 1:24pm
Following polarization to 1.0 VFc/Fc+, Raman features at 580 cm-1 show that O* species populate the Au surface. Subsequent time dependent measurements of the OCP display three regimes with distinct kinetic behavior that reflect the dispersion of the electrochemical double layer (1.0-0.85 VFc/Fc+), reduction of the O* monolayer (0.85-0.6 VFc/Fc+), and reduction of Au(OH)3 under the O* monolayer (0.6-0.35 VFc/Fc+). Coupled operando Raman spectroscopy supports these interpretations through attenuation of features indicative of solvated anions and Au-O. The addition of chemical reductants (e.g., C6H12, NaBH4) changes rates of OCP decay both for processes that reflect the dispersion of the electrochemical double-layer (1.0-0.85 VFc/Fc+) and consumption of surface intermediates (0.85-0.35 VFc/Fc+). The changes in these rates differ with identity and concentration of the chemical reductants. We extend this analysis to other aqueous electrolyte systems on Au and find that the OCP decay and consumption of surface oxygen species depends on electrolyte solution composition, supporting electrolyte anion, and flow rate. Insights from this work can be applied to other relevant electrochemical reactions to understand how reaction conditions affect electrochemical double-layer formation and reactive species consumption.