Electrochemical mass spectrometry. Part 1.—Preliminary studies of propane oxidation on platinum
Abstract
The technique of electrochemical mass spectrometry is described and applied to the oxidation of propane at platinum. The potential dependence for the production of propane, ethane and methane from propane adsorbate is given. Using propane-2-13C, it has been shown that all propane formed on reductive desorption originates from the carbon skeleton of the original propane and that methane arises with equal probability from all the carbon atoms in the original propane. The adsorbate formed at 0.25 V consists of a mixture of surface species whose stoichiometries could include C3H8, C3H7, C2H6, and C2H5. All adsorbate can be oxidized quantitatively to carbon dioxide.