IA exam #2
Metallic Indicator Electrodes
(1) Electrodes of First Kind (2) Electrodes of Second Kind
Potentiometry pros
- Relatively free from interferences and provide a rapid, and convenient - Nondestructive means of quantitatively determining numerous important ions and cations - Simple and inexpensive
Molecular-Selective Membrane Electrode
1) Gas Sensing Probes (CO2 and NH3) 2) Enzyme Substrate (urease membrane for blood urea)/Biocatalytic Membrane Electrodes:
Ion-selective Membrane electrodes: Non-crystalline membranes
1) Glass: silicate glasses for H+, Na+ 2) Liquid: liquid ion exchanger for Ca2+ 3) Immobilized liquid : liquid/polyvinyl chloride (PVC) matrix for Ca2+ and NO3-
Ion-selective Membrane electrodes: crystalline membranes
1) Single crystal: LaF3 for F 2) Polycrystalline or Mixed crystal: Ag2S for S2- and Ag+
boundary potential, Eb
Eb = E1- E2: varies with the pH of the analyte solution.
Ecell =
Ecathode (right) - Eanode (left)
Potentiometry cell potential equation
Ecell = Eind - Eref + Ej
Nernst equation
Ecell= E°cell - (RT/nF) (logQ)
Ecell = Constant - 0.0592 pH
L' + EAg/AgCl + Easy is constant value
Alkaline Error of pH Electrodes
In strong basic solution, [H+] is extremely small and [Metal+] is large. Glass electrodes respond to the concentration of both hydrogen and alkali metal ions such as Na+. pH values are lower than the true value.
reference electrode
Independent of the concentration of the analyte or any other ions in the solution. Always treated as the left-hand electrode in potentiometric measurement.
Exclusions of Nernst equation
Pure solid, liquid, or solvent, its activity is unity, and no term for A, B, C, or D is included in the equation. • A gas is replaced by PA , the partial pressure
Standard Hydrogen Reference Electrode (SHE)
Relative half-cell potentials can be measured against the same reference half-cell. replace Eleft (anode) with SHE
(Electrodes of Third Kind)
Responsive different cation than the Metal used Example: Hg electrode used to measure Ca+2
Junction potential (Ej)
The potential difference resulting from this charge separation. by ion diffusion across membrane ~ several hundredth of a Volt
in a irreversible battery
changing the direction of current causes entirely different half-reaction to occur at one or both electrodes
F = Faraday constant
charge of a single electron 9.649 x 10^4
In the case of the glass electrode, the [H+] inside the membrane is constant, and the concentration outside is determined by the
concentration or activity of the H+ in the analyte solution. -> The concentration difference produces the potential difference that we measure with a pH meter.
As reaction goes on, the initial cell potential
decreases continuously and approaches zero as the overall reaction approaches equilibrium -> the cell voltage is zero ("dead battery")
cathodes in batteries become electron
deficient due to its tendency to reduce Ag+(aq) + e- -> Ag (s)
Ecell related to free energy formula
deltaG0 = - nFE^0cell
current (I) is the opposite of
electron flow in a battery
how electrons travel in the electrochemical cell
electrons that are oxidized in anode are taken up by electrode traveling through circuit the Cl- from salt bridge travels to anode Ag ions move towards the silver electrode where they are then reduced by the incoming electrons from anode
Anodes in batteries collect
electrons, becoming electron rich due to metal used tendency to oxidize Cu (s) -> 2e- + Cu+2 (aq)
It is reduced when it
gains electrons.
E2 makes up
indicator reference electrode EAg,AgCl
Membrane electrodes are divided into
ion selective and molecular selective electrodes
The activity, or effective concentration, of species X depends on
ionic strength of the medium
SHE electrode is a universal reference, but
is really a hypothetical electrode (not used in practice) - Very sensitive to temperature, pressure, and H+ ion activity
electrolytic cell current flow
is the opposite of a galvanic cell what would be anode and cathode on a galvanic cell switches spots (redox rxns flip) reversible battery
A molecule is said to be oxidized when it
loses electrons.
advantages of electroanalytical methods
low detection fast inexpensive
The pH Glass (Membrane) Electrode
measure the potential that appears across a thin glass membrane that separate two solution with different hydrogen ion concentrations. has two reference electrodes
Types of Indicator Electrodes
metallic and membrane
Salt bridge (sat'd KCl):
minimize the liquid junction potential. The mobilities of K+ and Cl- are nearly equal. Typically a few millivolts
The potential of a hydrogen electrode depends
on temperature the activities of hydrogen ion and molecular hydrogen in the solution At PH2 = 1.0 atm and aH + = 1.00 M (standard state), the potential of the standard hydrogen electrode is 0.00 V at all temperatures.
The Anode is where
oxidation occurs
Electroanalytical methods measure
potential (volts) and/or current (amperes) in an electroanalytical cell containing analyte
Interfacial methods used
potentiometry voltammetry coulometry
Potentiometry salt bridge
prevents the components of the analyte solution from mixing with those of the reference electrode A potential develops across the liquid junctions at each end of the salt bridge. If the mobilities of the cation and the anion in the bridge solution are approximately same, these two potentials tend to cancel one another (KCl, the mobilities of K+ and Cl- ions are nearly equal). Although the junction potential is small enough to be neglected, the junction potential can be factors that limit measurement accuracy and precision.
inside of membrane has a known amount of
protons
q = n · N · F
q = Coulombs n = Unit charges per mole N = moles F = Faraday constant
if a cell potential is negative
reaction is not spontaneous, delta G is positive
if a cell potential is positive
reaction is spontaneous, delta G is neg
The Cathode is where
reduction occurs
E1 makes up
reference 1 ESCE and Ej Ej across the salt bridge separates the calomel electrode (SCE) from the analyte solution.
Electrolytic Cells
require an external applied voltage to drive electrical current. external source of energy for it to work
Ideal indicator electrode:
responds rapidly and reproducibly to changes in the concentration of an analyte ion (or group of analyte ions). Only a few are now available that are remarkably selective. Ecell = Eind - Eref
A pH-sensitive glass membrane involves an ion- exchange reaction between
singly charged cations in the interstices of the glass lattice and protons from the solution.
Galvanic cells operate
spontaneously
bulk methods
study whole analyte of solution conductometry
galvanic cell produces electricity because
the cell reaction is not at equilibrium once is reaches equilibrium electricity stops being produced
If there were no salt bridge,
the left half-cell would soon build up positive charge from excess Zn2+ and the right half-cell would build up negative charges by depletion of Cu2+ In an instant, chemical reaction and the process would cease.
Standard electrode potential (E0):
the measure of individual potential of an electrode at standard ambient conditions (298K, solutes at a concentration of 1 M, and gas pressure at 1 bar).
Although the internal reference electrode is a part of the glass electrode, it is not
the pH-sensing element. Instead, it is the thin glass membrane at the tip of the electrode that responds to pH.
EAg/AgCl
the potential of the internal Ag/AgCl reference electrode.
Current (I)
the quantity of charge (coulombs) flowing each second past a point in an electric circuit.
Ampere (A)
the unit of current = q(C)/s
potentiometry current
there is no current its zero
The thin glass membrane bulb (Indicator) at the tip of the electrode responds
to pH. - A charge imbalance across any material, there is an electrical potential differences across material. The internal reference (Ag/AgCl) is a part of the glass electrode, it is not the pH- sensing element.
The potential of a silver electrode is proportional
to the negative logarithm of the chloride ion activity.
Indicator electrode for ions:
used with reference electrode to measure potential of unknown analytes solution.
Electrodes of First Kind
• A Pure metal electrode is in direct contact with its own cation in the solution. (Cu electrode detects a Cu2+ cation) • A single reaction is involved.
SHE electrode
• E0 is relative to SHE • Assigned 0.000 V • Can be anode or cathode • Pt does not take part in reaction • Pt electrode coated with fine particles (Pt black) to provide large surface area • Cumbersome to operate
Electroanalytical methods can characterize
• Extent of adsorption or chemisorption • Rates and equilibrium constants for chemical reactions • Stoicheometry • Charge transfer
Electrodes of First Kind exhibit
• Low selectivity. e.g.) Cu electrode can not be used for the determination of Cu2+ in the presence of Ag+. • Many metals are easily oxidized (analyte solutions must be deaerated to remove oxygen.)
Ideal Reference Electrode characteristics
• Reversible • Little hysteresis • Follows Nernst equation • Stable potential with time
Glass membrane composition
• Si is bonded to oxygen and each oxygen is shared by two Si • Sufficient cations in the empty spaces balance the negative charge of the silicate groups • Single charged cations (e.g. Na+, Li+) are mobile in the lattice and are responsible for electrical conduction within the membrane.
Liquid Junction Potential
Ions diffuse across the boundary from the more concentrated to the more dilute solution. Driving force for each ion is proportional to the activity difference between the two solutions (H+ more mobile than Cl-). • The more diluted side of the boundary becomes positively charged because of the more rapid diffusion of the hydrogen ions. • The charge developed tends to counteract the differences in diffusion rates of the two ions so that a steady-state condition is attained rapidly.
Short hand electron configuration
1 line for phase boundary 2 line for salt bridge be sure to include all phases that occur in each cell
Oxidizing Agent
Accepts electrons and becomes reduced.
alternative reference electrodes the SHE
Ag/AgCl electrode Calomel electrode (Hg2Cl2)
Coulometry
Current through an electrochemical cell is held constant, at a specified potential, and the duration of the current is measured and related to concentration. Quantity measured = I and/or Time, Controlled = V, I (when measuring Time)
Easy
Differences in strain on the two surface of the membrane imparted during manufacture, mechanical abrasion and chemical etching of the surface during use.
Reducing Agent
Donates electrons and becomes oxidized.
Ideal Reference Electrode
Has a potential that is accurately known, constant and completely insensitive to the composition of the analyte solution
Voltammetry
Measurement of current through an electrolytic cell as a function of applied potential. Cyclic voltammetry and Amperometry are types of Voltammetry. Quantity measured = I (current), Controlled = V
Potentiometry
Measurement of the potential (voltage) of electrochemical cells (a galvanic cell) at zero current flow. Quantity measured = V, Controlled = I = zero measure cell potential and quantify analyte
potentiometry
Measurement of the potential of electrochemical cells without drawing substantial current. The voltage being proportional to the activity (concentration) of the ion being measured. Examples: pH measurements, ion-selective electrodes, titrations Quantity measured = V, Controlled = I = zero I= current
electrodes of the second kind
Metals not only serve as indicator electrodes for their own cations but also respond to the activity of anions. The anions with which its ion forms a precipitate or a stable complex ion
salt bridge
Permit the movement of ions across them to maintain electroneutrality in each vessel but prevent siphoning of liquid from one electrolyte solution to the other. Isolation is necessary to prevent direct reaction between copper ions and the zinc electrode.
Ion-selective Membrane electrodes types
Non-crystalline membranes and crystalline membranes
Acidic Error of pH Electrodes
Opposite in sign to the alkaline error (pH < 0.5). pH values are higher than the true value. The causes of the acidic error are not well understood.
cell potential (Ecell)
The difference in electric potential between the cathode and the anode
The Composition and Structure of Glass Membranes
The effects of glass composition on the sensitivity of membranes to protons and other cations, and a number of formulations are now used for the manufacture of electrodes.
Open Circuit
When a voltmeter of high internal resistance is connected or the electrodes are not connected externally -> no net reaction occurs. battery not connected
Electroactive species
a molecule can donate or accept electrons at an electrode.
Galvanic (Voltaic) Cells
a spontaneous chemical reaction generate electricity. One reagent must be oxidized and another must be reduced. Galvanic cells produce energy by a spontaneous oxidation reduction reaction. A battery is an example of a galvanic cell. no charging!!
Potentiometry- The voltage being proportional to the
activity (concentration) of the ion being measured. Widely used to locate end points in titrations. • Ion concentrations are measured directly from the potential of ion-selective membrane electrodes.
indicator electrode
an electrode placed in a sample in order to measure the concentration of an ion in the sample Develops a potential that depends on the activity of the analyte. responds to analyte
when Ecell is neg and rxn is not spontaneous
an electrolytic cell is being used
Electrolytic Cells Require
an external source of electrical energy for operation. Potential difference greater than galvanic potential difference to drive away from equilibrium.
Interfacial methods
analyze near electrodensor
Salt Bridge flow
anion will always migrate towards anode, cation will always migrate toward cathode in galvanic cell, salt bridge balances out movement of electrons from anode to cathode in electrolytic cell, anion just is attracted to positively-charged anode without a salt bridge, current immediately stops
electrochemical cells flow from
anode to cathode
electron flow is from
anode to cathode
Two reference electrodes (SCE and Ag/AgCl) for pH meter
are the mean of making electrical contact with the two sides of the glass membrane, and their potentials are essentially constant except for the junction potential (depends to a small extent on the analyte solution). Ecell = Eind - Eref + Ej
the more positive the E0
better electron acceptor more readily reduced/ oxidizing agent
the more negative the E0
better electron donor more readily oxidized/ reducing agent