Gold and gold-graphene used as cathodic interfaces for scission of carbon-halogen bonds. Application to the building of anthraquinone-Au electrodes - Archive ouverte HAL Access content directly
Journal Articles Electrochemistry Communications Year : 2014

Gold and gold-graphene used as cathodic interfaces for scission of carbon-halogen bonds. Application to the building of anthraquinone-Au electrodes

Abstract

Gold (smooth or covered with a thin layer of graphene) is an efficient free-radical scavenger when used as cathode material. This first work points out the immobilization of anthraquinone (AQ) in organic polar solvents containing tetraalkylammonium salts. It appears that Au and graphene, when negatively polarized (E > − 1.0 V vs. Ag/AgCl), may react towards 2-bromomethylantraquinone (AQ-CH2-Br) in different ways: with Au, a fast adsorption followed by one-electron transfer leads to a robust radical modification of the interface, whereas the presence of graphene permits the formation of a benzyl-type radical readily trapped by the graphene layer. Two different redox stable electrodes are thus produced. Additionally, stability of gold-graphene-AQ electrodes could be successfully tested in aqueous buffered solutions.
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Dates and versions

hal-01057935 , version 1 (25-08-2014)

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Jacques Simonet, Viatcheslav Jouikov. Gold and gold-graphene used as cathodic interfaces for scission of carbon-halogen bonds. Application to the building of anthraquinone-Au electrodes. Electrochemistry Communications, 2014, 40, pp.58-62. ⟨10.1016/j.elecom.2013.12.024⟩. ⟨hal-01057935⟩
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