Cottrell Equation Derivation
The Cottrell equation describes the diffusion-limited current at a planar electrode under non-steady-state conditions, a key step in polarography (e.g., Ilkovič equation derivation). The equation is:
where \( n \) is the number of electrons, \( F = 96485 \, \text{C/mol} \), \( A \) is the electrode area (cm²), \( D \) is the diffusion coefficient (cm²/s), \( t \) is time (s), and \( c_0 \) is the bulk concentration (mol/cm³).
Step 1: Fick's Second Law of Diffusion
The Cottrell equation is derived from Fick's Second Law, which governs non-steady-state diffusion:
where \( c(x, t) \) is the concentration (mol/cm³) at position \( x \) and time \( t \), and \( D \) is the diffusion coefficient. Boundary and initial conditions:
- At the electrode (\( x = 0 \), \( t > 0 \)): \( c(0, t) = 0 \) (complete depletion due to limiting potential).
- Far from the electrode (\( x \to \infty \), \( t \geq 0 \)): \( c(x, t) = c_0 \).
- Initially (\( t = 0 \), \( x \geq 0 \)): \( c(x, 0) = c_0 \).
Step 2: Solving Fick's Second Law
Use a similarity transform or Laplace transform to solve the partial differential equation. Let's use the Laplace transform for clarity. Define the Laplace transform of \( c(x, t) \):
Transform Fick’s Second Law:
With \( c(x, 0) = c_0 \), this becomes:
The general solution is:
Apply boundary conditions: As \( x \to \infty \), \( \bar{c} \to c_0 / s \), so \( B = 0 \). At \( x = 0 \), \( \bar{c}(0, s) = 0 \), so:
Thus:
Step 3: Concentration Gradient at the Electrode
The current depends on the concentration gradient at \( x = 0 \). Differentiate:
At \( x = 0 \):
Inverse Laplace transform (\( \mathcal{L}^{-1} \{ s^{-1/2} \} = \sqrt{\pi t} \)):
Step 4: Current from Fick's First Law
Using Fick's First Law, the flux at the electrode is:
The current is:
This is the Cottrell equation, showing current decreases as \( t^{-1/2} \) due to diffusion layer growth.
Step 5: Application to Polarography
The Cottrell equation assumes a planar, stationary electrode. In polarography, the dropping mercury electrode (DME) is spherical and grows, requiring corrections (e.g., Ilkovič equation) for surface area growth and convective effects.