posted on 2020-08-14, 16:07authored byNakul Pande, Shri K. Chandrasekar, Detlef Lohse, Guido Mul, Jeffery A. Wood, Bastian T. Mei, Dominik Krug
Confocal
fluorescence microscopy is a proven technique, which can
image near-electrode pH changes. For a complete understanding of electrode
processes, time-resolved measurements are required, which have not
been achieved previously. Here we present the first measurements of
time-resolved pH profiles with confocal fluorescence microscopy. The
experimental results compare favorably with a one-dimensional reaction–diffusion
model; this holds up to the point where the measurements reveal three-dimensionality
in the pH distribution. Specific factors affecting the pH measurement
such as attenuation of light and the role of dye migration are also
discussed in detail. The method is further applied to reveal the buffer
effects observed in sulfate-containing electrolytes. The work presented
here is paving the way toward the use of confocal fluorescence microscopy
in the measurement of 3D time-resolved pH changes in numerous electrochemical
settings, for example, in the vicinity of bubbles.