The adsorption and the changes in the interfacial composition of octanoic acid at the mercury/electrolyte interface was studied by measuring the differential capacitance at different concentrations of the supporting electrolyte, at various supporting electrolyte systems and at various temperatures.
The Adsorption and Condensed Film Formation of Cetyltrimethylammonium Bromide at the Mercury/Electrolyte Interface
β Scribed by Antonis Avranas; Utz Retter; Efi Malasidou
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 161 KB
- Volume
- 248
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9797
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β¦ Synopsis
The adsorption of cetyltrimethyammonium bromide (CTAB) on a hanging mercury electrode is studied in various electrolyte systems and temperatures. A condensed film is formed at negative potentials and at room temperature only in the presence of KBr. The decrease of the temperature favors the formation of the condensed film. Hysterisis phenomena are observed during the potential scans at both directions. Capacity time curves at the potentials where the film is formed show a nucleation and growth mechanism, with induction time depending on potential, which has been investigated using Avrami formulation and has been explained as a progressive one-dimensional nucleation with constant growth rate. The nucleation rate increases while moving toward more negative potentials. A linear decrease of the capacitance with time was observed in some cases independent of the measuring potential in a relative large potential range. The different types of micelles can affect the adsorption of CTAB on mercury. An unusual capacitance transient observed at a very narrow negative potential range is attributed to the formation of hemicylinders. The condensed film in the presence of the other electrolytes is observed only at high concentrations (1 M) and very low temperatures (5 degrees C).
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