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Morphology changes and mechanistic aspects of the electrochemically-induced reversible solid - Solid transformation of microcrystalline TCNQ into Co[TCNQ]2-based materials (TCNQ = 7,7,8,8-tetracyanoqujnodimethane)

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 05:40 authored by A NAFADY, Anthony O'Mullane, A NEUFELD, A BOND
The chemically reversible solid-solid phase transformation of a TCNQ-modified glassy carbon, indium tin oxide, or metal electrode into Co[TCNQ]2(H2O)2 material in the presence of Co2+(aq) containing electrolytes has been induced and monitored electrochemically. Voltammetric data reveal that the TCNQ/ Co[TCNQ]2(H2O)2 interconversion process is independent of electrode material and identity of cobalt electrolyte anion. However, a marked dependence on electrolyte concentration, scan rate, and method of electrode modification (drop casting or mechanical attachment) is found. Cyclic voltammetric and double potential step chronoamperometric measurements confirm that formation of Co[TCNQ]2(H2O)2 occurs through a rate-determining nucleation and growth process that initially involves incorporation of Co2+(aq) ions into the reduced TCNQ crystal lattice at the TCNQ|electrode|electrolyte interface. Similarly, the reverse (oxidation) process, which involves transformation of solid Co[TCNQ]2(H2O)2 back to parent TCNQ crystals, also is controlled by nucleation-growth kinetics. The overall chemically reversible process that represents this transformation is described by the reaction: 2TCNQ(s)0 + 2e- + Co 2+(aq) +2H2O[Co(TCNQ)2(H 2O)2](s). Ex situ SEM images illustrated that this reversible TCNQ/Co[TCNQ]2(H2O)2 conversion process is accompanied by drastic size and morphology changes in the parent solid TCNQ. In addition, different sizes of needle-shaped nanorod/nanowire crystals of Co[TCNQ]2(H2O)2 are formed depending on the method of surface immobilization.

History

Journal

Chemistry of Materials

Volume

18

Issue

18

Start page

4375

End page

4384

Total pages

10

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Place published

USA

Language

English

Copyright

© 2006 American Chemical Society.

Former Identifier

2006013715

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2010-12-06

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