Issue 36, 2017

Decrease in the double layer capacitance by faradaic current

Abstract

This study describes the reverse of the well-known double layer effects on charge transfer kinetics in the relationship between a cause and an effect. The reversible redox reaction of a ferrocenyl derivative decreased the capacitive values of the double layer impedance up to negative values, corresponding to an inductive component. This observation was disclosed by the subtraction of the real admittance from the imaginary admittance, which can extract the net double layer capacitance from the Warburg impedance. The inductance-like behavior is caused due to two reasons: (i) the double layer capacitance in the polarized potential domain is determined by the low concentrations of the field-oriented solvent dipoles that are considered as the conventionally employed redox concentrations and (ii) the double layer capacitance is caused by the orientation of the dipoles in the same direction as that of the electric field, whereas the redox reaction generates charge in the direction opposite to the field. The faradaic effect was demonstrated via the ac-impedance data obtained for the ferrocenyl compound in a KCl solution in the unpolarized potential domain between 1 Hz and 3 kHz frequency. The negative admittance was proportional to the frequency. The theory of negative capacitance was presented by combining the mirror-image surface charge with the Nernst equation.

Graphical abstract: Decrease in the double layer capacitance by faradaic current

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 Feb 2017
Accepted
05 Apr 2017
First published
24 Apr 2017
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

RSC Adv., 2017,7, 22501-22509

Decrease in the double layer capacitance by faradaic current

K. J. Aoki, J. Chen, X. Zeng and Z. Wang, RSC Adv., 2017, 7, 22501 DOI: 10.1039/C7RA01770G

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