Electrochemical and FTIRS characterisation of NO adlayers on cyanide-modified Pt(111) electrodes: the mechanism of nitric oxide electroreduction on Pt

被引:46
作者
Cuesta, Angel [1 ]
Escudero, Maria [1 ]
机构
[1] CSIC, Inst Quim Fis Rocasolano, E-28006 Madrid, Spain
关键词
D O I
10.1039/b717396b
中图分类号
O64 [物理化学(理论化学)、化学物理学];
学科分类号
070304 ; 081704 ;
摘要
We report here a study, using cyclic voltammetry and FTIRS, of NO irreversibly adsorbed on a cyanide-modified Pt(111) electrode. NO adlayers were formed by immersion of the cyanide-modified Pt(111) electrode in an acidic solution of KNO2. The behaviour of NO adsorbed on the cyanide-modified electrode is very similar to that of NO on the clean Pt(111) surface, suggesting that adsorbed cyanide (saturation coverage theta(CN) = 0.5) behaves simply as a third body, blocking some of the surface sites but leaving the free Pt sites unaffected. Comparison of the voltammetric pro. le for NO electroreduction on Pt(111) and on cyanide-modified Pt(111) electrodes has allowed us: (i) to confirm that the reduction of three-fold hollow NO and atop NO on Pt(111) electrodes occurs in two distinct reduction peaks, as previously proposed by Rosca et al. (Langmuir, 2005, 21, 1448); (ii) to suggest that the reduction of irreversibly adsorbed NO layers on Pt electrodes can proceed through two possible paths, one involving an EE mechanism in which the rate-determining step (rds) is an Eley-Rideal reaction, with a direct proton transfer from the solution to adsorbed NO, and the other involving an EC mechanism in which the rds is a Langmuir-Hinshelwood reaction of adsorbed NO with adsorbed H. The availability of adsorbed hydrogen determines which path is followed by the reaction; (iii) to identify the smallest atomic ensemble for the reduction of NO on Pt as being composed of two adjacent Pt atoms.
引用
收藏
页码:3628 / 3634
页数:7
相关论文
共 35 条
[1]   AN INFRARED STUDY OF NO ADSORPTION AT DEFECT SITES ON PT(111) [J].
AGRAWAL, VK ;
TRENARY, M .
SURFACE SCIENCE, 1991, 259 (1-2) :116-128
[2]   Nitric oxide reduction and oxidation on stepped pt[n(111)x(111)] electrodes [J].
Beltramo, GL ;
Koper, MTM .
LANGMUIR, 2003, 19 (21) :8907-8915
[3]   NO chemisorption and reactions on metal surfaces: A new perspective [J].
Brown, WA ;
King, DA .
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B, 2000, 104 (12) :2578-2595
[4]   ABINITIO MRD-CL STUDY ON LOW-LYING ELECTRONIC STATES IN THE HNO, NOH ISOMERS [J].
BRUNA, PJ .
CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 1980, 49 (01) :39-52
[5]   Nitric-oxide adsorption and oxidation on Pt(111) in electrolyte solution under potential control [J].
Casero, E ;
Alonso, C ;
Martín-Gago, JA ;
Borgatti, F ;
Felici, R ;
Renner, F ;
Lee, TL ;
Zegenhagen, J .
SURFACE SCIENCE, 2002, 507 :688-694
[6]   PREPARATION OF MONO-CRYSTALLINE PT MICROELECTRODES AND ELECTROCHEMICAL STUDY OF THE PLANE SURFACES CUT IN THE DIRECTION OF THE (111) AND (110) PLANES [J].
CLAVILIER, J ;
FAURE, R ;
GUINET, G ;
DURAND, R .
JOURNAL OF ELECTROANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, 1980, 107 (01) :205-209
[7]  
Climent V, 1999, INTERFACIAL ELECTROCHEMISTRY, P463
[8]   At least three contiguous atoms are necessary for CO formation during methanol electrooxidation on platinum [J].
Cuesta, Angel .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2006, 128 (41) :13332-13333
[9]   Mechanistic study of the nitric oxide reduction on a polycrystalline platinum electrode [J].
de Vooys, ACA ;
Koper, MTM ;
van Santen, RA ;
van Veen, JAR .
ELECTROCHIMICA ACTA, 2001, 46 (06) :923-930
[10]   THE ADSORBATE-INDUCED REMOVAL OF THE PT(100) SURFACE RECONSTRUCTION .1. NO [J].
GARDNER, P ;
TUSHAUS, M ;
MARTIN, R ;
BRADSHAW, AM .
SURFACE SCIENCE, 1990, 240 (1-3) :112-124