Temperature (over) compensation in an oscillatory surface reaction
Contribuinte(s) |
UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO |
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Data(s) |
20/10/2012
20/10/2012
2008
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Resumo |
Biological rhythms are regulated by homeostatic mechanisms that assure that physiological clocks function reliably independent of temperature changes in the environment. Temperature compensation, the independence of the oscillatory period on temperature, is known to play a central role in many biological rhythms, but it is rather rare in chemical oscillators. We study the influence of temperature on the oscillatory dynamics during the catalytic oxidation of formic acid on a polycrystalline platinum electrode. The experiments are performed at five temperatures from 5 to 25 degrees C, and the oscillations are studied under galvanostatic control. Under oscillatory conditions, only non-Arrhenius behavior is observed. Overcompensation with temperature coefficient (q(10), defined as the ratio between the rate constants at temperature T + 10 degrees C and at T) < I is found in most cases, except that temperature compensation with q(10) approximate to I predominates at high applied currents. The behavior of the period and the amplitude result from a complex interplay between temperature and applied current or, equivalently, the distance from thermodynamic equilibrium. High, positive apparent activation energies were obtained under voltammetric, nonoscillatory conditions, which implies that the non-Arrhenius behavior observed under oscillatory conditions results from the interplay among reaction steps rather than, from a weak temperature dependence of the individual steps. |
Identificador |
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A, v.112, n.20, p.4617-4624, 2008 1089-5639 http://producao.usp.br/handle/BDPI/31612 10.1021/jp801361j |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
AMER CHEMICAL SOC |
Relação |
Journal of Physical Chemistry A |
Direitos |
restrictedAccess Copyright AMER CHEMICAL SOC |
Palavras-Chave | #FORMIC-ACID OXIDATION #NEGATIVE ACTIVATION-ENERGIES #CURVED ARRHENIUS PLOTS #NOBLE-METAL ELECTRODES #BRIGGS-RAUSCHER REACTION #BEATING MERCURY HEART #SULFITE FLOW SYSTEM #ELECTROCHEMICAL OXIDATION #ABSORPTION SPECTROSCOPY #POTENTIAL OSCILLATIONS #Chemistry, Physical #Physics, Atomic, Molecular & Chemical |
Tipo |
article original article publishedVersion |