Issue 3, 1996

Mechanistic signatures in the oxidation of butan-1-ol at a rotating Pd disk in alkaline media from combining cyclic voltammetry with instabilities

Abstract

Palladium, in contrast to platinum, is a poor electrochemical catalyst for primary alcohols in acid solution. Cyclic voltammetry has been applied to the oxidation of butan-1-ol at a rotating Pd-disk electrode in alkaline solution. The activity of butan-1-ol at Pd is compared with that at Pt. Substantially higher current densities are achieved at Pd. At low concentrations, a peak exists in the current–potential curve for both electrodes that originates from the oxidation of an aldehyde intermediate to the carboxylate ion. For Pd, increasing the concentration of butan-1-ol causes the peak to disappear. At large concentrations, increasing the upper limit of the potential cycle from a low value induces a transition from the typical period-one cyclic voltammetric response to a period-two response. The current–potential curve for the period-two response has the same form as those for processes where formation and removal of surface-bonded carbon monoxide dominate the electrode kinetics. Many other high-order periodic states are observed. For Pt, increasing the concentration does not cause the peak corresponding to carboxylate production to disappear. No high-order periodic states are observed in the oxidation of butan-1-ol at Pt. It is concluded that, in alkaline solution, Pd is more effective than Pt in cleaving the bond between the first two carbon atoms.

Article information

Article type
Paper

J. Chem. Soc., Faraday Trans., 1996,92, 395-402

Mechanistic signatures in the oxidation of butan-1-ol at a rotating Pd disk in alkaline media from combining cyclic voltammetry with instabilities

Z. Zdraveski, Y. Xu, A. Amini and M. Schell, J. Chem. Soc., Faraday Trans., 1996, 92, 395 DOI: 10.1039/FT9969200395

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