Author:
MacLeod ID,Muir DM,Parker AJ,Singh P
Abstract
Organic nitriles stabilize
acidic aqueous copper(I) sulphate solutions. Electrolysis of such solutions
provides an alternative for the electrowinning and electrorefining of copper.
The Cu+/CuO and Cu2+/Cu+
standard reduction potentials in aqueous solutions containing acetonitrile or
3-hydroxy-propanenitrile (hydracrylonitrile) differ from those in water, due to
the specific solvation and stabilization of the copper(I) ion by either
nitrile. In the mixed solvent, the solvation sphere around the copper(I) ion
contains organic nitrile, rather than water, and this reduces the mobility of
Cu+ and slows its diffusion to the electrode surface in a working
cell. The copper(II) ion contains water in its solvation shell in the mixed
solvent. Thus for dilute solutions, the diffusion coefficient of the copper(I)
ion in 10 mole % aqueous acetonitrile is about two-thirds and in 10% 3- hydroxypropane-nitrile-water is about one-fifth that of the
copper(II) ion in water. In concentrated solutions containing sulphuric acid,
the copper(II) ion diffuses as ion pairs and this reduces its mobility. This
effect is not observed for copper(I) ions. Cell voltages measured during the
electrolysis of copper(I) sulphate solutions by using soluble copper, insoluble
platinum or insoluble carbon anodes are analysed in terms of the ohmic
resistance, the equilibrium potential, the charge-transfer overpotential and
the diffusion polarization of the working cell. There is a significant
charge-transfer overpotential for the oxidation of Cu+ to Cu2+
at an insoluble graphite anode in 6 mol dm-3 acetonitrile-water
solutions; the rate constant is 4 x 10-4 cm s-1. At
platinum the rate constant is 1.6 x 10-2 cm s-1.
Cited by
40 articles.
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