LATTICE CONTRACTIONS AND EXPANSIONS ACCOMPANYING THE ELECTROCHEMICAL CONVERSIONS OF PRUSSIAN BLUE AND THE REVERSIBLE AND IRREVERSIBLE INSERTION OF RUBIDIUM AND THALLIUM IONS
A. Dostal et al., LATTICE CONTRACTIONS AND EXPANSIONS ACCOMPANYING THE ELECTROCHEMICAL CONVERSIONS OF PRUSSIAN BLUE AND THE REVERSIBLE AND IRREVERSIBLE INSERTION OF RUBIDIUM AND THALLIUM IONS, Journal of electroanalytical chemistry [1992], 406(1-2), 1996, pp. 155-163
When microcrystalline Prussian blue particles, which are mechanically
immobilised on the surface of a graphite electrode, are cyclically oxi
dised and reduced in contact with an electrolyte solution containing r
ubidium or thallium ions, it will be observed that the voltammetric si
gnal of the hexacyanoferrate system vanishes whereas the signal of the
nitrogen-coordinated iron remains active. Fully reduced Prussian blue
, i.e. Everitt's salt, contains either two rubidium or thallium ions p
er two iron ions. One of the Rb+ and Tl+ ions is irreversibly bonded a
nd cannot leave the Prussian blue lattice. This prevents an oxidation
of Prussian blue to Prussian yellow, The reason for the irreversible b
onding of one of these cations is a lattice contraction which occurs w
hen Everitt's salt is oxidised to Prussian blue. In the Prussian blue
state, the Tl+ and Rb+ ions cannot diffuse through the channels, which
is necessary for a further oxidation, In the fully oxidised state, th
e so-called Prussian yellow, the channels are again widened, but this
compound is not an ion conductor and thus the oxidation cannot proceed
either. When thallium ions have been inserted into the cavities of Pr
ussian blue, they can leave the cavities at very negative potentials (
E(p) = -1.36 V vs. Ag/AgCl) to form metallic thallium on the graphite.
For charge compensation, they are substituted in the Everitt's salt b
y potassium ions, After the oxidation of the metallic thallium at -0.6
7 V, the thallium ions enter the Everitt's salt lattice again and the
potassium ions leave it, because thallium ion insertion is favoured by
160 mV (corresponding to a Delta G = -12.35 kJ mol(-1)). The behaviou
r of rubidium and thallium ions in Prussian blue can be explained with
the help of a consistent geometric model of the lattice contractions
and expansions which accompany the electrochemical reactions. This mod
el is supported by independent X-ray studies.