Collision Dynamics during the Electrooxidation of Individual Silver Nanoparticles.
Donald A RobinsonYuwen LiuMartin Andrew EdwardsNicholas J VittiStephen M OjaBo ZhangHenry Sheldon WhitePublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2017)
Recent high-bandwidth recordings of the oxidation and dissolution of 35 nm radius Ag nanoparticles at a Au microelectrode show that these nanoparticles undergo multiple collisions with the electrode, generating multiple electrochemical current peaks. In the time interval between observed current peaks, the nanoparticles diffuse in the solution near the electrolyte/electrode interface. Here, we demonstrate that simulations of random nanoparticle motion, coupled with electrochemical kinetic parameters, quantitatively reproduce the experimentally observed multicurrent peak behavior. Simulations of particle diffusion are based on the nanoparticle-mass-based thermal nanoparticle velocity and the Einstein diffusion relations, while the electron-transfer rate is informed by the literature exchange current density for the Ag/Ag+ redox system. Simulations indicate that tens to thousands of particle-electrode collisions, each lasting ∼6 ns or less (currently unobservable on accessible experimental time scales), contribute to each experimentally observed current peak. The simulation provides a means to estimate the instantaneous current density during a collision (∼500-1000 A/cm2), from which we estimate a rate constant between ∼5 and 10 cm/s for the electron transfer between Ag nanoparticles and the Au electrode. This extracted rate constant is approximately equal to the thermal collisional velocity of the Ag nanoparticle (4.6 cm/s), the latter defining the theoretical upper limit of the electron-transfer rate constant. Our results suggest that only ∼1% of the surface atoms on the Ag nanoparticles are oxidized per instantaneous collision. The combined simulated and experimental results underscore the roles of Brownian motion and collision frequency in the interpretation of heterogeneous electron-transfer reactions involving nanoparticles.