The Lead Dioxide Anode. I. A Kinetic Study of the Electrolytic Oxidation of Cerium(III) and Manganese(II) in Sulfuric Acid at the Lead Dioxide Electrode
Australian Journal of Chemistry
42(2) 229 - 242
Published: 1989
Abstract
The electrolytic oxidation reactions of cerium(III) and manganeseII) in sulfuric acid have been used as probes to investigate the mechanism of the lead dioxide anode. The kinetics observed for such reactions at the lead dioxide surface provide no direct support for the proposal that the lead dioxide anode functions by a sequential 'two-step' mechanism (heterogeneous chemical oxidation of solution species followed by electrochemical oxidation of the reduced lead dioxide surface); rather the kinetics show characteristics similar to those observed previously for the oxidation of cerium(III) and manganese(II) at the platinum electrode, suggesting that the lead dioxide surface functions as a simple, 'inert' electron-transfer agent.
https://doi.org/10.1071/CH9890229
© CSIRO 1989