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The Effect of Solvent Type on the Infrared Spectrum of Carbon Monoxide Adsorbed at Platinum Electrodes
Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry and Interfacial Electrochemistry (1988)
  • Mark R. Anderson, Kennesaw State University
  • Daniel Blackwood, University of Utah
  • Thomas G. Richmond, University of Utah
  • Stanley Pons, University of Utah
Abstract

The infrared spectrum of CO adsorbed on a platinum electrode from several solvents was investigated. In N-methylformamide, acetonitrile, and 1,2-dichloroethane, the infrared band attributed to linearly bonded CO had experimental Stark tuning rates of 20 cm−1/V, 22 cm−1/V, and 19 cm−1/V, respectively. For each of these solvents, the potential dependence of the band position was found to be linear for the entire potential range investigated. When methanol was the solvent, the plot of the band position versus potential had three distinctly linear portions, each with a different value for the slope. The behavior is explained in terms of the ability of the solvent molecules to approach the electrode surface closely, the polarity of the solvent, and the orientation of solvent molecules with respect to the polarization of the electrode.

Disciplines
Publication Date
December 9, 1988
Citation Information
Mark R. Anderson, Daniel Blackwood, Thomas G. Richmond and Stanley Pons. "The Effect of Solvent Type on the Infrared Spectrum of Carbon Monoxide Adsorbed at Platinum Electrodes" Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry and Interfacial Electrochemistry Vol. 256 Iss. 2 (1988)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/mark_anderson1/48/