Methylene green voltammetry in aqueous solution: Studies using thermal, microwave, laser, or ultrasonic activation at platinum electrodes

The voltammetry of the aqueous two-electron reduction of the phenothiazine dye methylene green, known to be passivating at platinum electrodes, is reported under simultaneous activation with each of the following techniques: thermal activation in the temperature range 15-80°C, pulsed microwave activ...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Akkermans, R, Roberts, S, Marken, F, Coles, B, Wilkins, S, Cooper, J, Woodhouse, K, Compton, R
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 1999
Description
Summary:The voltammetry of the aqueous two-electron reduction of the phenothiazine dye methylene green, known to be passivating at platinum electrodes, is reported under simultaneous activation with each of the following techniques: thermal activation in the temperature range 15-80°C, pulsed microwave activation with a modified 800 W, 2.45 GHz domestic microwave oven, 10 Hz pulsed laser activation with a Nd:YAG laser at 532 nm, sonication, or ultrasonic activation where a 20 kHz ultrasonic horn probe is employed to generate an aqueous/ organic solvent emulsion. The relative merits of the five methodologies are compared and discussed in terms of surface activation and cleaning, mass-transport enhancement, and reduction mechanism elucidation. Comparisons are also drawn with the voltammetry of methylene blue, a dye of the same family. This is the first full report of both the effects of microwave heating on surface redox electrochemistry and of the sonoemulsion technique. © 1999 American Chemical Society.