Issue 12, 2000

Alloy electrodes with high hydrogen overvoltage for analytical use in voltammetry. Some preliminary results

Abstract

Liquid mercury and liquid diluted mercury amalgams have been the major electrode systems employed in voltammetry and related methods. This is mainly due to their high overvoltage to hydrogen, which enables the determination of heavy metals (zinc, nickel, cobalt, etc.) and other species with high negative half-wave potentials; the toxicity of mercury and liquid diluted mercury leads to ever increasing restrictions in their use. The use of such systems may even be forbidden in the future, at least in online systems for work in the field. Recent work, carried out in our laboratory, has demonstrated that a non-toxic solid dental amalgam may be used as the electrode material, conveniently replacing mercury. An extension of this work has shown that electrode materials comprising a metal or a compound with low hydrogen overvoltage change their hydrogen overvoltage properties substantially when contaminated with even small amounts of metals or compounds which show high hydrogen overvoltage. This extends greatly the range of potentially available electrode systems and thereby analytical possibilities of voltammetry. This new discovery also makes it possible to produce solid electrodes that have high overvoltage to hydrogen without any use of mercury.

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
20 Oct 2000
Accepted
26 Oct 2000
First published
16 Nov 2000

Analyst, 2000,125, 2163-2165

Alloy electrodes with high hydrogen overvoltage for analytical use in voltammetry. Some preliminary results

Ø. Mikkelsen and K. H. Schrøder, Analyst, 2000, 125, 2163 DOI: 10.1039/B008473P

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