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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Mechanistic studies of surface-confined electrochemical proton coupled electron transfer

2012 July 1900 (has links)
Mechanistic studies of electrochemical proton coupled electron transfer (PCET) have attracted attention for many decades due to their importance in many fields ranging from electrocatalysis to biology. However, mechanistic research is confined to only a few groups, and challenges in this field can be found in both theory and experiment. The contributions to mechanistic studies of electrochemical PCET reaction in this thesis can be categorized under the following two headings: 1) mechanistic studies of an aminobenzoquinone modified monolayer system with multiple electron/proton transfer reaction; 2) studies that attempt to develop the relationship between thermochemical data and electrochemical PCET mechanism. An aminobenzoquinone modified monolayer showing nearly ideal electrochemical behavior and high stability was successfully prepared and used as a model system for the mechanistic study of electrochemical multiple electron/proton transfer. This model system has been proposed to undergo a 2e3H transfer at low pH electrolyte and a 2e2H transfer at high pH electrolyte. Two non-destructive electrochemical techniques (cyclic voltammetry and chronocoulmetry) have been applied for the measurement of apparent standard rate constant as a function of pH. Both pH dependent apparent formal potential and pH dependent apparent standard rate constant have been used to determine the charge transfer mechanism of this monolayer system. Under the assumption of an operative PCET mechanism (i.e. electron transfer step is the rate determining step), a theoretical description of this system has been developed based on the refinement and extension of previous models. By combining this extended theoretical model with pH dependent apparent formal potential and apparent standard rate constant, charge transfer pathways have been determined and shown to be consistent with the observed pH dependent electrochemical response, in addition, the determined pathways in this aminobenzoquinone modified monolayer are similar to previous reported pathways for benzoquinone freely dissolved in aqueous buffered electrolyte. A series of analytical expressions built in this thesis demonstrate that the parameters that differentiate stepwise mechanisms from concerted mechanisms can be classified into two aspects: thermodynamic parameters, namely acid dissociation constants, standard formal potentials; and kinetic parameters, namely standard rate constants, standard transfer coefficients. Although attempts to understand the relation between controlling parameters and electrochemical PCET mechanism (stepwise versus concerted) has been reported previously by some groups, there are still lots of unresolved aspects requiring further investigation. In this thesis, an important conclusion has been drawn which is that for the stepwise mechanism, an apparent experimentally observable kinetic isotope effect (KIE) can be induced by solvent isotope induced variation of acid dissociation constants, which contradicts previous understanding. Additionally, for the first time, values of apparent KIE, which were measured for the aminobenzoquinone modified monolayer system with stepwise PCET mechanism, were successfully explained by variation in acid dissociation constants, not by variation in standard rate constants. Based on theoretical prediction, a nitroxyl radical modified bilayer showing one electron one proton transfer reaction has been prepared in an effort to afford experimental verification. After applying similar analytical procedures as those for the aminobenzoquinone modified monolayer system, this bilayer system has been shown to follow the concerted 1e1H transfer pathway in high pH electrolytes. These latter contributions provide evidence that further development in this field will eventually lead to a comprehensive theory that can use known thermochemical variables to fully predict PCET mechanism.
2

Étude cinétique du mécanisme de transfert de proton dans une réaction acidobasique en milieu aqueux

Legault-St-Germain, Félix 10 1900 (has links)
Les détails du mécanisme d’une réaction acidobasique sont encore nébuleux au sein de la communauté scientifique. Les résultats présentés dans cet ouvrage suggèrent un modèle mécanistique général basé sur la théorie de l’état de transition pour une réaction acidobasique en milieu aqueux. Ce modèle est proposé après l’analyse méticuleuse de 56 simulations mettant en avant-plan une réaction de transfert de proton entre le phénol et l’acétate dans l’eau. Cette réaction passe par différents nombres d’acteurs, incluant l’acide, la base et le nombre de molécules d’eau impliquées dans le transfert. Ce modèle général regroupe de nombreux mécanismes par lesquels le transfert de proton survient. Il s’agit notamment de procédés impliquant différents nombres de molécules d’eau intermédiaires (1, 2, 3, 4 ou 5), mais aussi des cas où l’acide entre en contact direct avec la base et des cas où la déprotonation de l’acide semble indépendante de la base. Cette proposition présente aussi une nouvelle définition quantitative des mécanismes concerté et séquentiel jusqu’ici différenciés qualitativement dans la littérature. / The details of the acid-base reaction mechanism are still rather vague among the scientific community. The results shown in this document suggest a general mechanism predicated on the transition state theory for the acid-base reaction in an aqueous environment. This model is offered after a meticulous analysis of 56 computational simulations presenting a proton transfer reaction between a phenol derivative and the acetate ion in water. The number of actors greatly varies from one reaction to another, including the acid, the base and the numerous water molecules engaged in the transfer. This general model encompasses many sub-mechanisms leading to the proton transfer completion. Mostly, the processes involve different amounts of bridging water molecules (1, 2, 3, 4 or 5). Yet, it also showcases scenarios where the acid interacts directly with the base and some situations where the acid deprotonation seems to behave independently from the base. This proposal further offers a new, quantitative distinction between the concerted and sequential mechanisms rather than the until-now qualitative description in the literature.

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