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hitech1
Oct13-09, 05:20 AM
I am doing a catalytic study on my Pt nanoparticles. My experiment set-up is a three-electrode cell with sulfuric acid as electrolyte for methanol electrooxidation reaction. Now, i want to calculate the apparent activation energy and for that I need to get the voltammograms at various temperatures (eg. between 30oC - 60oC). After that I have to plot log i(current density, mA/cm2) vs 1000/T(in K) at a certain potential (eg. 0.6V) and then from the slope i can calculate the activation energy (this is based from a paper i read). I am having some doubts as to how to settle with the values of i because I`m kind of confused with the conversions and units like if I "log" the unit what will happen to "mA/cm2" and the like. Also, should I use the actual current density reading from the CV plot as is or do i need to consider other things? anyone with experience on this area, please kindly share some insights. Thanks.

Mapes
Oct13-09, 09:33 AM
If you're just looking at the slope, then you'll be calculating \log I_2-\log I_1=\log(I_2/I_1) and the units will cancel out.

What paper are you referring to (just curious)?

hitech1
Oct13-09, 10:32 PM
Thank you for the reply.
This is the paper I am referring to : Electrooxidation of methanol on platinum doped polyaniline electrodes: deposition potential and temperature effect

here is the linkk :
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6TGB-3SDCCFC-28&_user=130270&_rdoc=1&_fmt=&_orig=search&_sort=d&_docanchor=&view=c&_searchStrId=1047223999&_rerunOrigin=google&_acct=C000010799&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=130270&md5=5914e803ab0f43e6ca00f8fbe6780dda

Based from your equation, I should be getting two I`s. If I2 is the current density from the CV plot at a certain potential, where can I get the corresponding I1? Is I1 related to the double layer current or something else?

Mapes
Oct13-09, 10:52 PM
I_1 comes from the same experiment at a different temperature.

hitech1
Oct13-09, 11:23 PM
if that is the case, for example if my temperatures are 30oC, 35oC,40oC,...,60oC;
I will have I(35oC)/I(30oC), I(40oC)/I(30oC),...,I(60oC)/I(30oC)?
that being the case, there would have been no negative values on the log i - axis since an increasing temperature normally increases current density. but from the graph on the paper that i was reading, log i - axis has negative values.

Borek
Oct14-09, 04:41 AM
It depends on the reference chosen - if you start with I(30°C) there are no negative values, but if you start with I(40°C) you will get them.

Not that it matters.

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hitech1
Oct14-09, 05:15 AM
i see. thanks for the enlightenment.

hitech1
Oct14-09, 05:19 AM
by the way, if ill get negative values that way, is it supposed to be between -1 and 0 only? but from the paper, the range in the y-axis (log i) is -2.5 to -4. it doesnt seem to add up...

Borek
Oct14-09, 06:10 AM
Why -1..0? That will mean current ratio between 1 and 0.1 (assuming log10).

I don't have access to the paper.

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hitech1
Oct14-09, 11:20 PM
I was not really sure about that. For now I will continue with the measurements and try to see whether I will arrive at a similar result.

hitech1
Nov3-09, 10:11 PM
good day.
I have settled the issue, thanks for all the inputs from you guys. i used impedance spectroscopy for the activation energy calculation and it did suit for me well.

nimmysnv
Nov4-09, 03:40 AM
I_1 comes from the same experiment at a different temperature.

This is exactly my point and I1 always taken for different temperatures everytime.

Thanks!