Web Release Date: January 10,
Accumulation Mechanism for Metal Chalcogenide Nanoparticles at Hg0 Electrodes: Copper Sulfide Example
,

,
and
in
Center for Marine and Environmental Research, Institute Ru
er Bo
kovi
, Bijeni
ka 54, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia, Department
of Chemistry and Biochemistry and Department of Geology, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742, and
Department of Physical Chemistry, Institute Ru
er Bo
kovi
, Bijeni
ka 54, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia
Received for review June 4, 2007. Accepted November 3, 2007.
Abstract:
Mercury electrodes preconcentrate metal chalcogenide
nanoparticles effectively, enabling their detection at submicromolar concentrations (as
chalcogenide) by adsorptive cathodic stripping voltammetry. Understanding the
unique behavior of nanoparticle analytes during preconcentration is critical for lowering detection limits and for
quantification. A multistep mechanism is proposed on the
basis of accumulation experiments with polydisperse
copper sulfide (CuxS) nanoparticles. Particles first diffuse
and adsorb at the Hg0 surface. When both the electrode
and particles have negative surface potentials, this process
resembles charge-impeded coagulation, obeying the
Schulze-Hardy rule at various electrolyte strengths.
Consequently, accumulation rates are surprisingly sensitive to electrolyte concentration. Choosing accumulation
potentials where the electrode and particles have opposite
surface potentials greatly improves collection efficiency,
especially for the smallest particles. After adsorption,
particles undergo transformations. One product is a more
stable (harder to reduce) form of CuxS, interpreted to
consist of adclusters or adlayers. A very significant (~0.3
V) negative shift in reduction potential results from this
transformation. Loss of analyte to at least one nonelectroactive product is also observed. Loss is greatest for the
smallest particles and is sensitive to choice of accumulation potential. To improve accumulation efficiency, accumulation potentials more positive that the potential of
zero charge of Hg electrodes are advantageous but care
must be taken to remove dissolved chalcogenides under
these conditions in order to avoid artifacts.
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