Sonoelectrochernistry understood via nanosecond voltammetry: Sono-emulsions and the measurement of the potential of zero charge of a solid electrode
"Nanosecond" electrochemistry is used to study acoustically emulsified mixtures of aqueous electrolyte and smaller quantities of heptane. Significant current spikes of microsecond duration are observed under potentiostatic conditions and attributed to the impacting of heptane droplets onto...
Hoofdauteurs: | Banks, C, Rees, N, Compton, R |
---|---|
Formaat: | Journal article |
Taal: | English |
Gepubliceerd in: |
2002
|
Gelijkaardige items
-
Surface acoustic cavitation understood via nanosecond electrochemistry
door: Maisonhaute, E, et al.
Gepubliceerd in: (2001) -
Voltammetry in the presence of ultrasound: A novel sono-electrode geometry
door: Eklund, J, et al.
Gepubliceerd in: (1996) -
Sono-emulsion electrosynthesis: electrode-insensitive Kolbe reactions
door: Wadhawan, J, et al.
Gepubliceerd in: (2001) -
Surface acoustic cavitation understood via nanosecond electrochemistry. 2. The motion of acoustic bubbles
door: Maisonhaute, E, et al.
Gepubliceerd in: (2002) -
Voltammetry at spatially heterogeneous electrodes
door: Davies, T, et al.
Gepubliceerd in: (2005)