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Catalytically Induced Electrokinetics for Motors and Micropumps

449

Citations

22

References

2006

Year

TLDR

Ion flux from platinum to gold generates an electric field that can drive electrokinetic motion, with ethanol reducing speed by lowering current density, indicating that PtAu nanorod motion in H₂O₂ is primarily catalytically induced electrokinetics. The study confirmed the electrochemical decomposition pathway by measuring steady‑state short‑circuit current between platinum and gold interdigitated microelectrodes in H₂O₂. The authors found that PtAu nanorod speed scales linearly with solution resistivity, that the catalytically generated electric field near a Pt/Au IME induces externally switchable electroosmotic flow whose velocity follows the field strength, and that nanorod motion is mainly driven by catalyt.

Abstract

We have explored the role of electrokinetics in the spontaneous motion of platinum−gold nanorods suspended in hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) solutions that may arise from the bimetallic electrochemical decomposition of H2O2. The electrochemical decomposition pathway was confirmed by measuring the steady-state short-circuit current between platinum and gold interdigitated microelectrodes (IMEs) in the presence of H2O2. The resulting ion flux from platinum to gold implies an electric field in the surrounding solution that can be estimated from Ohm's Law. This catalytically generated electric field could in principle bring about electrokinetic effects that scale with the Helmholtz−Smoluchowski equation. Accordingly, we observed a linear relationship between bimetallic rod speed and the resistivity of the bulk solution. Previous observations relating a decrease in speed to an increase in ethanol concentration can be explained in terms of a decrease in current density caused by the presence of ethanol. Furthermore, we found that the catalytically generated electric field in the solution near a Pt/Au IME in the presence of H2O2 is capable of inducing electroosmotic fluid flow that can be switched on and off externally. We demonstrate that the velocity of the fluid flow in the plane of the IME is a function of the electric field, whether catalytically generated or applied from an external current source. Our findings indicate that the motion of PtAu nanorods in H2O2 is primarily due to a catalytically induced electrokinetic phenomenon and that other mechanisms, such as those related to interfacial tension gradients, play at best a minor role.

References

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