The mechanism of the cathodic reduction of oxygen on smooth platinum in 0.5 M H,SO, solution has been studied on the basis of the current efficiency for H,O, formation. H,O, formation occurs at cathode potentials 1680 mV (nhe), whereas the initial rest-potential lies at 960 mV. The current efficien
Reduction of nitric oxide at a platinum cathode in an acidic solution
โ Scribed by L.J.J. Janssen; M.M.J. Pieterse; E. Barendrecht
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1977
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 348 KB
- Volume
- 22
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0013-4686
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โฆ Synopsis
The reduction of nitric oxide at a platinum electrode in 4 M H$O, was investigated by the measurement of potential/current relations and by the determination of the current efficiencies for the hydroxylamine, nitrous oxide, ammonia, hydrazine and hydrogen formation at fixed potentials in the potential range from 0 to -400mV vs see. The potential/current curve for the reduction of nitric oxide has two waves, of which the limiting currents depend strongly on the potential and the time of the pretreatment of the electrode and on the direction of the potential change during the measurements. In the potential range of the first wave (uiz c > -30 mV) nitric oxide is reduced only to nitrous oxide. In the whole potential range of the second wave (oiz from -50 to -250 mV) nitric oxide is reduced to hydroxylamine, ammonia and nitrous oxide. Formation of hydrazine has not been detected.
From the literature and from the relations of the current efficiencies a possible mechanism is proposed for the reduction of nitric oxide.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The electrochemical reduction of the multilayer oxide on smooth Pt electrode in HClO, solution was studied using a galvanostatic technique. This oxide is completely reduced in the potential region where the electrosorption of hydrogen on Pt electrode occurs and the reduction rate depends on the hydr
## Itiscontirmed that nitratcreduces to ammonia in high yield atacoppercathode inaqueousacidic perchlorate and sulphate media. At pH below 2, well formed reduction waves are observed; the process is irreversible but in the plateau region it is mass transfer controlled. AbovepH 3, no reduction occu