Results of low energy electron diffraction and work function studies of alkalimetal adsorption on metal surfaces are presented. The adsorption of Na on W( 112) surfaces resulted in the formation of one-dimensionally periodic arrays which underwent a continuous compression with increasing Na coverage
Acetate adsorption and metal overlayers on electrode surfaces
β Scribed by Douglas P. Root; Namal Priyantha
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 363 KB
- Volume
- 36
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0013-4686
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Acetate adsorbs onto platinum surfaces under moderate conditions and the presence of acetate on the electrode surface is apparent by voltammetric studies. The adsorption of acetate lends an unusual stability to layers of zinc acetate on the electrode surface. The reduction of an oxidized platinum surface under a zinc acetate coating is sensitive to polar organic molecules in the bulk solution. This sensitivity may provide an avenue to a new class of analytical sensors.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The adsorption of acetic acid has been studied on platinum, gold and rhodium electrodes from aqueous electrolytes. On the platinum electrode, the evidences have been preseated that in the double layer region of the electrode potentiak (i) the undisaociated acetic acid molecule is adsorbed, (ii) the
The noncompetitive adsorption of the proteins albumin and fibrinogen onto 17 different metal surfaces has been studied in vitro using '251-labeled proteins. Although many of the metals showed very similar adsorption characteristics to polymers, several of them adsorbed considerably greater amounts.