Mechano-Electrochemistry
and Fuel-Forming Mechano-Electrocatalysis
on Spring Electrodes
Posted on 2014-08-21 - 00:00
Each
material, in principle, possesses a continuum of electrochemical
and electrocatalytic properties that can be reversibly tuned by mechanical
stress over its elastic range. As an initial test of this hypothesis
we investigate stainless steel extension springs as electrodes. Stretching
the springs reversibly doubles the heterogeneous rate constant for
electron transfer to a redox species in solution, Ru(NH3)6Cl3, while the charge transfer rate through
a surface film of Ni(II/III) oxy-hydroxide increases ∼4-fold.
Straining the springs near their elastic limit in 1 M NaOH increases
the electrcatalytic hydrogen evolution current by ∼50% and
the oxygen evolution current by ∼300%. Thus, even the small
elastic strain (∼0.1% lattice deformation) that can be applied
by stretching a spring leads to significant and reversible increases
in the rates of: 1) electron transfer to a redox couple in solution,
2) charge transport through a surface film, and 3) electrocatalysis.
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Svedruzic, Drazenka; Gregg, Brian A. (2016). Mechano-Electrochemistry
and Fuel-Forming Mechano-Electrocatalysis
on Spring Electrodes. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jp506279q