The Ilkovič equation is fundamental in polarography, describing the diffusion-limited current at a dropping mercury electrode (DME). Below is a step-by-step derivation of the equation for the average diffusion current:
where \( n \) is the number of electrons, \( D \) is the diffusion coefficient (cm²/s), \( m \) is the mercury flow rate (mg/s), \( t \) is the drop time (s), and \( c_0 \) is the bulk concentration (mmol/L).
Step 1: Fick's Laws of Diffusion
Diffusion in electrolysis is governed by Fick's laws.
- Fick's First Law: The flux of ions is proportional to the concentration gradient:
\[ \frac{dN}{dt} = -D A \frac{\partial c}{\partial x} \]The diffusion current is:\[ i = n F A D \frac{\partial c}{\partial x} \]where \( F = 96485 \, \text{C/mol} \).
- Fick's Second Law: For non-steady-state conditions:
\[ \frac{\partial c}{\partial t} = D \frac{\partial^2 c}{\partial x^2} \]Boundary conditions: \( c(0, t) = 0 \), \( c(x \to \infty, t) = c_0 \), \( c(x, 0) = c_0 \).
Step 2: Cottrell Equation for Planar Electrode
For a stationary planar electrode, solve Fick's second law. The concentration profile is:
The gradient at the surface (\( x = 0 \)):
The current is:
This is the Cottrell equation, showing current decreases as \( t^{-1/2} \).
Step 3: Adaptation to Dropping Mercury Electrode (DME)
The DME is a growing spherical drop. Mercury mass at time \( t \): \( m t \). Drop radius:
Surface area:
Substituting into the Cottrell equation:
Step 4: Ilkovič Correction for Expanding Surface
The growing drop thins the diffusion layer, increasing current. Ilkovič's correction factor is \( \sqrt{7/3} \):
Evaluating constants (with \( F = 96485 \), \( i_d \) in μA, \( c_0 \) in mmol/L):
Step 5: Average Current Over Drop Life
The measured current is averaged over drop time \( t \):
Since \( i_d(t') \propto (t')^{1/6} \), the integral gives:
This is the Ilkovič equation used in polarography.
Realated Topics:
Derivation of Randles Sevcik Equation
Derivation of Cottrell Equation
Nicholson-Shain Theory for Cyclic Voltammetry