Published November 27, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Development and Characterization of Electrodes for Surface-Specific Attenuated Total Reflection Two-Dimensional Infrared Spectroelectrochemistry

  • 1. University of Chicago
  • 2. Argonne National Laboratory

Description

Electrochemical interfaces still have remaining mysteries surrounding the interfacial region of the electrical double layer, despite being prevalent throughout the energy and water remediation industries. The electrical double layer is where many important dynamic processes such as catalysis and electron transfer occur. The goal of this work is to study the electrical double layer with two-dimensional infrared (2D IR) spectroscopy to experimentally access the details of the structural dynamics of this complex environment. However, there are several experimental challenges to applying 2D IR spectroscopy to this application, such as assuring the surface specificity of the spectrum, optimizing the signal strength while minimizing spectral distortions from dispersion and Fano line shapes, and selecting electrode materials that are both sufficiently IR compatible and conductive. Here we will discuss various considerations when designing 2D IR experiments of electrode interfaces utilizing several substrates and experimental configurations and demonstrate a robust method for 2D IR experiments of electrode interfaces under applied potential that combines nonconducting Si ATR wafers with conductive ITO and thin nanostructured films of plasmonically active Au functionalized with 3-mercapto-2-butanone (MCB). We show that layered electrodes on thin Si ATR wafers with MCB are sensitive to applied potential and that the distortions in the linear and 2D IR spectra are heavily dependent on the morphology of the Au surface.

Data availability

All data has been made publically available on Zenodo at https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.10210850.

Files

Development-and-Characterization-of-Electrodes.pdf

Files (6.1 MB)

Name Size Download all
Article
md5:012e581cd697bc6a2e54ac1f1c00150e
5.4 MB Preview Download
Supporting information
md5:8f45898f3a082a2d7da958794bc0a60b
613.4 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1021/acs.jpcc.3c05445
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10161

Funding

U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences
U.S. Department of Energy
DE-SC0014305

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Physical Sciences Division, Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering
Department(s)
Chemistry
Center(s) or Institute(s)
Institute for Biophysical Dynamics, James Franck Institute