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Fabrication and characterisation of nanostructured palladium hydride microelectrode pH sensors

Fabrication and characterisation of nanostructured palladium hydride microelectrode pH sensors
Fabrication and characterisation of nanostructured palladium hydride microelectrode pH sensors

Nanostructured Pd films were electrodeposited on Pt microdisc electrodes using a molecular template created by a hexagonal lyotropic crystalline phase.  While retaining micrometer dimensions these electrodes possess huge electroactive surface areas;  i.e. roughness factors of H1-e Pd films were estimated to be typically 300.  Hydrogen absorption was shown to be very fast for H1-e Pd films and the films were readily loaded with hydrogen to β phase.  It was found to be possible to obtain the Pd-hydride with the desired H/Pd ratio by controlling the potential and the time of electrolysis.

The nanostructured Pd-hydride microelectrodes showed excellent potentiometric response over a wide range of pH (2 ~ 12).  The potentiometric pH response was rapid, stable, reproducible and almost theoretical in deaerated solutions.  These properties, clearly superior to conventional micro pH sensors, were thought to be achieved by the combination of (1) the α+β Pd-hydride phase which was known to show almost theoretical potential with normal size electrodes and (2) a nanostructured film with a huge surface area and a rapid potential determining process (H+ + e ⇄ H(Pd-H)).  H1-e Pd-hydride microelectrodes had limited lifetime (typically 1 ~ 3 hours in deaerated solutions) because of the continuous removal of hydrogen under open circuit conditions.  Although the lifetime is too short for continuous process monitoring, it is sufficient for many analytical applications.  The electrode can be reloaded with hydrogen quickly, which makes it possible to perform pH measurements repeatedly.

University of Southampton
Imokawa, Toru
fc6becc4-df70-4998-9693-143ac572c593
Imokawa, Toru
fc6becc4-df70-4998-9693-143ac572c593
Denuault, Guy
5c76e69f-e04e-4be5-83c5-e729887ffd4e

Imokawa, Toru (2003) Fabrication and characterisation of nanostructured palladium hydride microelectrode pH sensors. University of Southampton, Doctoral Thesis.

Record type: Thesis (Doctoral)

Abstract

Nanostructured Pd films were electrodeposited on Pt microdisc electrodes using a molecular template created by a hexagonal lyotropic crystalline phase.  While retaining micrometer dimensions these electrodes possess huge electroactive surface areas;  i.e. roughness factors of H1-e Pd films were estimated to be typically 300.  Hydrogen absorption was shown to be very fast for H1-e Pd films and the films were readily loaded with hydrogen to β phase.  It was found to be possible to obtain the Pd-hydride with the desired H/Pd ratio by controlling the potential and the time of electrolysis.

The nanostructured Pd-hydride microelectrodes showed excellent potentiometric response over a wide range of pH (2 ~ 12).  The potentiometric pH response was rapid, stable, reproducible and almost theoretical in deaerated solutions.  These properties, clearly superior to conventional micro pH sensors, were thought to be achieved by the combination of (1) the α+β Pd-hydride phase which was known to show almost theoretical potential with normal size electrodes and (2) a nanostructured film with a huge surface area and a rapid potential determining process (H+ + e ⇄ H(Pd-H)).  H1-e Pd-hydride microelectrodes had limited lifetime (typically 1 ~ 3 hours in deaerated solutions) because of the continuous removal of hydrogen under open circuit conditions.  Although the lifetime is too short for continuous process monitoring, it is sufficient for many analytical applications.  The electrode can be reloaded with hydrogen quickly, which makes it possible to perform pH measurements repeatedly.

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Published date: 2003

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 456027
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/456027
PURE UUID: 5c868068-35a4-4160-b3c2-870941e1a027
ORCID for Guy Denuault: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8630-9492

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 12 Apr 2022 16:40
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:38

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Contributors

Author: Toru Imokawa
Thesis advisor: Guy Denuault ORCID iD

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