3rd Edition

Scanning Electrochemical Microscopy

Edited By Allen J. Bard, Michael V. Mirkin Copyright 2022
618 Pages 328 Color & 147 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

618 Pages 328 Color & 147 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

618 Pages 328 Color & 147 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

Because of its simplicity of use and quantitative results, Scanning Electrochemical Microscopy (SECM) has become an indispensable tool for the study of surface reactivity. The fast expansion of the SECM field over several years has been fueled by the introduction of new probes, commercially available instrumentation, and new practical applications. Scanning Electrochemical Microscopy , Third... Read more

1 Introduction and Principles

Allen J. Bard

2 Tip Preparation and Instrumentation for Nanoscale Scanning Electrochemical Microscopy

Jiyeon Kim and Kevin C. Leonard

3 Scanning Electrochemical Microscopic Imaging

Kevin C. Leonard, Tess Seuferling, Jiyeon Kim, and Fu-Ren F. Fan

4 Theory

Michael V. Mirkin and Yixian Wang

5 Heterogeneous Electron-Transfer Reactions

Shigeru Amemiya

6 Electrocatalysis and Surface Interrogation

Hyun S. Ahn, Cynthia G. Zoski, and Allen J. Bard

7 Nanoscale SECM

Xiang Wang, Gaukhar Askarova, and Michael V. Mirkin

8 Molecular Transport in Membranes

Mei Shen and Shigeru Amemiya

9 Potentiometric Probes

Guy Denuault, Geza Nagy, and Klara Tóth

10 Biotechnological Application of Scanning Electrochemical Microscopy

Benjamin R. Horrocks and Gunther Wittstock

11 Scanning Electrochemical Microscopy of Living Cells

Changyue Du, Thilini Suduwella, Isabelle Beaulieu, Steen B. Schougaard, and Janine Mauzeroll

12 Surface Reactions and Films

Jean-Marc Noël and Philippe Hapiot

13 SECM Techniques for Locally Interrogating the Photocatalytic Activity of Semiconducting Materials for Solar-Driven Chemical Transformations

Caleb M. Hill and Shanlin Pan

14 Micro and Nanopatterning: Using Scanning Electrochemical Microscopy (SECM)

Daniel Mandler

15 Micro and Nanopipettes for Electrochemical Imaging and Measurement

Kristen Alanis, Sasha Elena Alden, Lane Allen Baker, Edappalil Satheesan Anupriya, Henry David Jetmore, and Mei Shen

16 Application to Batteries and Fuel Cells

Zachary T. Gossage, Kendrich O. Hatfield, Yuanya Zhao, Raghuram Gaddam, Dipobrato Sarbapalli, Abhiroop Mishra, and Joaquín Rodríguez-López

17 Hybrid Scanning Electrochemical Techniques: Methods and Applications

Christine Kranz and Christophe Demaille

18 Additional Recent Applications and Prospects

Andreas Lesch, Allen J. Bard, and Hubert H. Girault

Biography

Allen J. Bard, Hackerman-Welch Regents Chair Professor and director of the Center for Electrochemistry, University of Texas at Austin, USA Allen J. Bard was born in New York City on December 18, 1933 and grew up and attended public schools there, including the Bronx High School of Science (1948-51). He attended The City College of the College of New York (CCNY) (B.S., 1955) and Harvard University (M.A., 1956, PhD., 1958). He joined the faculty at The University of Texas at Austin (UT) in 1958, and has spent his whole career there. He has been the Hackerman-Welch Regents Chair in Chemistry at UT since 1985. He spent a sabbatical in the CNRS lab of Jean-Michel Savéant in Paris in 1973 and a semester in 1977 at the California Institute of Technology, where he was a Sherman Mills Fairchild Scholar. He was also a Baker lecturer at Cornell University in the spring of 1987 and the Robert Burns Woodward visiting professor at Harvard University in 1988. He has worked as mentor and collaborator with 75 Ph.D students, 17 M.S. students, 150 postdoctoral associates, and numerous visiting scientists. He has published over 900 peer-reviewed research papers, more than 80 book chapters and other publications, authored 3 books, and has received over 30 patents. He served as Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of the American Chemical Society 1982-2001.

 

Michael V. Mirkin, Professor of Chemistry, Queens College at the City University of New York, USA Michael V. Mirkin is professor of chemistry at Queens College, City University of New York. His professional interests are in the application of electrochemical methods to solving problems in physical and analytical chemistry and include charge-transfer reactions at solid–liquid and liquid–liquid interfaces, electrochemical kinetics, and nanoelectrochemistry. He has published more than 110 peer-reviewed papers and book chapters and co-edited the first monograph on scanning electrochemical microscopy. He earned a PhD in electrochemistry (1987) from Kazakh State University (former USSR) and did postdoctoral research at the University of Texas at Austin from 1990 to 1993.