Migration Effects cause Linear Response in Cyclic Voltammetry of Metal Anode Electrodeposition/Dissolution without Supporting Electrolyte: Calculations and Experiments on a Model Case

22 October 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Cyclic voltammetry of metal anode electrodeposition/dissolution often gives linear response in the absence of supporting electrolyte. For a one-electron redox model system without supporting electrolyte in which both redox species are soluble, and the oxidized one is zero-valent, finite different numerical calculations on the Nernst–Plank–Poisson equation have revealed that migration effects almost entirely counteract the overpotential to exhibit such linear responses in voltammetry. In the calculation the dumping Newton–Raphson method was used to avoid numerical divergence. The voltammetric response calculated on the model system was verified on a ferrocene-derivative redox system that yields a soluble zero-valent oxidative product. An approximate interpretation of the linearity was also proposed.

Keywords

metal anode battery
cyclic voltammogram simulation
no supporting electrolyte
zero-valent product

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