Selective ElectroChemical Analysis
In this chapter we introduced three 
electrochemical methods of analysis: 
potentiometry
,coulometry 
voltammetry. 
1:In potentiometry we measure the potential of an indicator 
electrode without allowing any significant current to pass through the 
electrochemical cell. In principle we can use the Nernst equation to 
calculate the analyte’s activity—junction potentials, however, require 
that we standardize the electrode.
There are two broad classes of 
potentiometric electrodes:
1:Metallic electrodes 
1:Membrane electrodes
Metallic electrodes
 The potential of a metallic electrode is the result of a redox reaction 
at the electrode’s surface. An electrode of the first kind responds to 
the concentration of its cation in solution; thus, the potential of a Ag
 wire is determined by the activity of Ag+ in solution. If 
another species is in equilibrium with the metal ion, the electrode’s 
potential also responds to the concentration of that species. 
For example
 The potential of a Ag wire in a solution of Cl– responds to the concentration of Cl– because the relative concentrations of Ag+ and Cl– are fixed by the solubility product for AgCl. We call this an electrode of the second kind.
Determination
The potential of a membrane electrode is
 determined by a difference in the composition of the solution on each 
side of the membrane. Electrodes using a glass membrane respond to ions 
that bind to negatively charged sites on the membrane’s surface. A pH 
electrode is one example of a glass membrane electrode. 
Membrane electrodes
Other kinds of 
membrane electrodes include those using insoluble crystalline solids or 
liquid ion-exchangers incorporated into a hydrophobic membrane. The F– ion-selective electrode, which uses a single crystal of LaF3 as the ion-selective membrane, is an example of a solid-state electrode. The Ca2+ ion-selective electrode, in which the chelating di-(n-decyl)phosphate is immobilized in a PVC membrane, is an example of a liquid-based ion-selective electrode.
Determined
Potentiometric electrodes can be 
designed to respond to molecules by using a chemical reaction that 
produces an ion whose concentration can be determined using a 
traditional ion-selective electrode. A gas-sensing electrode, for 
example, include a gas permeable membrane that isolates the 
ion-selective electrode from the gas. When the gas diffuses across the 
membrane it alters the composition of the inner solution, which is 
monitored with an ion-selective electrode. An enzyme electrodes operate 
in the same way.
Coulometric methods
Coulometric methods are based on 
Faraday’s law that the total charge or current passed during an 
electrolysis is proportional to the amount of reactants and products in 
the redox reaction. If the electrolysis is 100% efficient—meaning that 
only the analyte is oxidized or reduced—then we can use the total charge
 or current to determine the amount of analyte in a sample. In 
controlled-potential coulometry we apply a constant potential and 
measure the resulting current as a function of time. In 
controlled-current coulometry the current is held constant and we 
measure the time required to completely oxidize or reduce the analyte.
Voltammetry Method
In voltammetry we measure the current in an electrochemical cell as a function of the applied potential. There are several different voltammetric methods that differ in terms of the type of working electrode, how we apply the potential, and whether we include convection (stirring) as a means for transporting of material to the working electrode.
Techniques
Polarography is a voltammetric technique
 that uses a mercury electrode and an unstirred solution. Normal 
polarography uses a dropping mercury electrode, or a static mercury drop
 electrode, and a linear potential scan. Other forms of polarography 
include normal pulse polarography, differential pulse polarography, 
staircase polarography, and square-wave polarography, all of which use a
 series of potential pulses.
In hydrodynamic voltammetry the solution
 is stirred using either a magnetic stir bar or by rotating the 
electrode. Because the solution is stirred a dropping mercury electrode 
can not be used; instead we use a solid electrode. Both linear potential
 scans and potential pulses can be applied.
In stripping voltammetry the analyte is 
first deposited on the electrode, usually as the result of an oxidation 
or reduction reaction. The potential is then scanned, either linearly or
 by using potential pulses, in a direction that removes the analyte by a
 reduction or oxidation reaction.
Amperometry is a voltammetric method in 
which we apply a constant potential to the electrode and measure the 
resulting current. Amperometry is most often used in the construction of
 chemical sensors for the quantitative analysis of single analytes. One 
important example is the Clark O2 electrode, which responds to the concentration of dissolved O2 in solutions such as blood and water.







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