Using Voltammetry Augmented with Physics-Based Modeling and Bayesian Hypothesis Testing to Estimate Electrolyte Composition

06 July 2021, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Voltammetry is a foundational electrochemical technique that can qualitatively and quantitatively probe electroactive species in electrolytes and as such has been used in numerous fields of study. Recently, automation has been introduced into voltammetric analyses to extend their capabilities (e.g., Bayesian parameter estimation, compound identification via machine learning); however, opportunities exist to enable more versatile methods across a wider range of electrolyte and experimental conditions. Here, we present a protocol that uses experimental voltammetry, physics-driven models, binary hypothesis testing, and Bayesian inference to enable robust labeling of electroactive species in multicomponent electrolytes across multiple techniques. We first describe the development of this protocol, and we subsequently validate the methodology in a case study involving five N-functionalized phenothiazine derivatives. In this analysis, the protocol correctly labeled an electrolyte containing 10H-phenothiazine and 10-methylphenothiazine from both cyclic voltammograms and cyclic square wave voltammograms, demonstrating its ability to identify electroactive constituents of a multicomponent solution. Finally, we identify areas of further improvement (e.g., achieving greater detection accuracy) and future applications to potentially enhance in situ or operando diagnostic workflows.

Keywords

cyclic voltammetry
Cyclic Square Wave Voltammetry
Compound Identification Algorithm
Bayesian Inference Framework
Physics-Based Modeling
Phenothiazine Core Unit

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Title
Fenton-Jr-&-Brushett SI
Description
Supplementary Information for the main text. Discusses methods and analyses in greater detail.
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