Coulometry and Calorimetry of Electric Double Layer Formation in Porous Electrodes

Publication date

2017-10-19

Authors

Janssen, MathijsISNI 0000000493258624
Griffioen, Elian
Biesheuvel, M. M.
Roij, René vanISNI 0000000392993654
Erné, Ben HISNI 0000000397074702

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

Coulometric measurements on salt-water-immersed nanoporous carbon electrodes reveal, at a fixed voltage, a charge decrease with increasing temperature. During far-out-of-equilibrium charging of these electrodes, calorimetry indicates the production of both irreversible Joule heat and reversible heat, the latter being associated with entropy changes during electric double layer (EDL) formation in the nanopores. These measurements grant experimental access - for the first time - to the entropic contribution of the grand potential; for our electrodes, this amounts to roughly 25% of the total grand potential energy cost of EDL formation at large applied potentials, in contrast with point-charge model calculations that predict 100%. The coulometric and calorimetric experiments show a consistent picture of the role of heat and temperature in EDL formation and provide hitherto unused information to test against EDL models.

Keywords

Capacitance, Electric double layers, Electrochemistry, Nonequilibrium & irreversible thermodynamics, Thermodynamics, Thermodynamics of mixing, Taverne, General Physics and Astronomy

Citation

Janssen, M, Griffioen, E, Biesheuvel, P M, Van Roij, R & Erné, B 2017, 'Coulometry and Calorimetry of Electric Double Layer Formation in Porous Electrodes', Physical Review Letters, vol. 119, no. 16, 166002. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.119.166002