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Creators/Authors contains: "Gutierrez-Portocarrero, Salvador"

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  1. A mechanism for the concerted pathway of coupled electron- and phase-transfer reactions (CEPhT) is proposed. CEPhT at three-phase interfaces formed by a solid electrode, an insulating organic solvent, and an aqueous electrolyte is driven by electric double layer (EDL) spillover, with significant electrostatic potential gradients extending a few nanometers into the insulating phase. This EDL spillover phenomenon is studied using scanning electrochemical cell microscopy to interrogate the oxidation of ferrocene in toluene to ferrocenium in water, (Fc)tol → (Fc+)aq + e–. Finite element method simulations of the electrostatic potential distribution and species concentration profiles enable the calculation of complete i–E curves that incorporate mass transport, electron transfer, phase transfer, and the EDL structure. Simulated and experimental i–E traces show good agreement in the current magnitude and the effect of the supporting electrolyte, identifying an unexpected dependence of overall reaction kinetics on the concentration of the supporting electrolyte in the aqueous phase due to EDL spillover. An interfacial toluene/water mixing region generates a unique electrochemical microenvironment where concerted electron transfer and solvent shell replacement facilitate CEPhT. Kinetic expressions for concerted and sequential CEPhT mechanisms highlight the role of this interfacial environment in controlling the rate of CEPhT. These combined experimental and simulated results are the first to support a concerted mechanism for CEPhT where (Fc)tol is transported to the interfacial mixing region at the three-phase interface, where it undergoes oxidation and phase transfer. EDL spillover can be leveraged for engineering sample geometries and electrostatic microenvironments to drive electrochemical reactivity in classically forbidden regions, e.g., insulating solvents and gases. 
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  2. Single-particle electrochemistry has become an important area of research with the potential to determine the rules of electrochemical reactivity at the nanoscale. These techniques involve addressing one entity at the time, as opposed to the conventional electrochemical experiment where a large number of molecules interact with an electrode surface. These experiments have been made feasible  through the utilization of ultramicroelectrode (UMEs), i.e., electrodes with at least one dimension, e.g., diameter of 30 μm or less. This paper provides a theoretical and practical introduction to single entity electrochemistry (SEE), with emphasis on collision experiments between suspended NPs and UMEs to introduce concepts and techniques that are used in several SEE experimental modes. We discuss the intrinsically small currents, below 1 nA, that result from the electroactive area of single entities in the nanometer scale. Individual nanoparticles can be detected using the difference in electrochemical reactivity between a substrate and a nanoparticle (NP). These experiments show steady-state behavior of single NPs that result in discrete current changes or steps. Likewise, the NP can have transient interactions with the substrate electrode that result in current blips. We review the effect of diffusion, the main mass transport process that limits NP/electrode interactions. Also, we pointed out the implications of aggregation and tunneling in the experiments. Finally, we provid a perspective on the possible applications of single-element electrochemistry of electrocatalyst. 
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  3. Because of its large electrochemical window, acetonitrile (MeCN) is one of the most widely used solvents in electrochemistry. It is a suitable solvent for nonaqueous electrolytes that allows studies of cathodic and anodic processes, but electrolyte purification remains challenging. As received, the high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) grade is unsuitable for most electroanalytical applications. We present an approach to optimize the purification of HPLC-grade acetonitrile to yield a tetrabutylammonium perchlorate (TBAP)/MeCN electrolyte for experiments in nonaqueous media. We used cyclic voltammetry (CV) to show the background due to impurities and to guide the experimental design to a background current acceptable for CVs of a 1 mM typical concentration of a redox-active molecule. We use 3A molecular sieves, followed by distillation over CaH2 with a final treatment with Al2O3. The optimized procedure yields CH3CN with small background currents, increasing the signal-to-noise ratio and minimizing chemical complications over a wide potential window. Our approach includes discriminating between impurities in the solvent and electrolyte salts; for TBAP, we recrystallize from ethyl acetate and 95 % ethanol. The process and theoretical guidelines apply to other nonaqueous electrolytes dealing with electroactive impurities, including organic molecules, oxygen, and water. 
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  4. Temperature dependence studies of electrochemical parameters provide insight into electron transfer processes. In cases where adding excess electrolyte causes experimental complications, e.g., colloidal systems, organic or biological samples, it is preferable to deal with the high resistivity of the medium. We validate the use of unsupported and weakly-supported solutions in thermoelectrochemical experiments. The temperature dependence of the diffusion coefficient allows calibration of the steady-state current to measure changes when a continuous-wave (CW) ultraviolet laser,λ= 325 nm, illuminates an ultramicroelectrode (UME) from the front. Calibrating the steady-state current ratios, before and after heating with a thermostatic bath, allows temperature measurements within an accuracy of 0.6 K. The solutions are without supporting electrolytes in methanol, a volatile solvent, and we use a model that accurately describes the viscosity and temperature dependence of the solvent. We calculated the temperature and derived an equation to estimate the error in the temperature measurement. A numeric method yields satisfactory results, considering the changes for both diffusion coefficients and viscosity explicitly, and predicts the thermostatic temperature bath, agreeing with the theoretical model’s error. In unsupported solutions, the ferrocene diffusion coefficient and the iodide apparent diffusion coefficient follow the expected increase with temperature. Under CW laser illumination, the UME temperature increase is: ΔT = 4 ± 1 K. 
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  5. null (Ed.)
    We present the analysis of formaldehyde (HCHO) in anhydrous methanol (CH 3 OH) as a case study to quantify HCHO in non-aqueous samples. At higher concentrations (C > 0.07 M), we detect a product of HCHO, methoxy methanol (MM, CH 3 OCH 2 OH), by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, FTIR. Formaldehyde reacts with CH 3 OH, CD 3 OH, and CD 3 OD as shown by FTIR with a characteristic spectral feature around 1,195 cm −1 for CH 3 OH used for the qualitative detection of MM, a formaldehyde derivative in neat methanol. Ab initio calculations support this assignment. The extinction coefficient for 1,195 cm −1 is in the order of 1.4 × 10 2  M −1 cm −1 , which makes the detection limit by FTIR in the order of 0.07 M. For lower concentrations, we performed the quantitative analysis of non-aqueous samples by derivatization with dinitrophenylhydrazine (DNPH). The derivatization uses an aqueous H 2 SO 4 solution to yield the formaldehyde derivatized hydrazone. Ba(OH) 2 removes sulfate ions from the derivatized samples and a final extraction with isobutyl acetate to yield a 1:1 methanol: isobutyl acetate solvent for injection for electrospray ionization (ESI). The ESI analysis gave a linear calibration curve for concentrations from 10 to 200 µM with a time-of-flight analyzer (TOF). The detection and quantification limits are 7.8 and 26 μM, respectively, for a linear correlation with R 2 > 0.99. We propose that the formaldehyde in CH 3 OH is in equilibrium with the MM species, without evidence of HCHO in solution. In the presence of water, the peaks for MM become less resolved, as expected from the well-known equilibria of HCHO that favors the formation of methylene glycol and polymeric species. Our results show that HCHO, in methanol does not exist in the aldehyde form as the main chemical species. Still, HCHO is in equilibrium between the production of MM and the formation of hydrated species in the presence of water. We demonstrate the ESI-MS analysis of HCHO from a non-aqueous TiO 2 suspension in methanol. Detection of HCHO after illumination of the colloid indicates that methanol photooxidation yields formaldehyde in equilibrium with the solvent. 
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