Pockels Effect of Interfacial Water on a Mono-Electrode Induced by Current Parallel to the Electrode Surface

Author:

Morozumi Kairi1,Kanemaru Hironori1,Okada Akihiro1,Ichimiya Tomonari1,Kobayashi Takayoshi234,Tokunaga Eiji14

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics, Faculty of Science, Tokyo University of Science, 1-3 Kagurazaka, Shinjuku-ku 162-8601, Tokyo, Japan

2. Advanced Ultrafast Laser Research Center and Department of Engineering Science, The University of Electro-Communications, Chofu 182-8585, Tokyo, Japan

3. Department of Electrophysics, National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University, 1001 Ta Hsueh Road, Hsinchu 300, Taiwan

4. Research Center for Water Frontier Science and Technology, Tokyo University of Science, 1-3 Kagurazaka, Shinjuku-ku 162-8601, Tokyo, Japan

Abstract

When an electric field is applied between two electrodes facing each other immersed in a liquid, the interfacial Pockels effect, a refractive index change proportional to the electric field, occurs in the electric double layer at the liquid–electrode interface. Here, we report that the Pockels effect of interfacial water can be observed even when an electric field is applied parallel to the surface of a “single” electrode in an electrolyte solution. This is a non-trivial result since the electric field parallel to the interface should not cause a broken spatial inversion symmetry, which is required for the Pockels effect. The Pockels signal was detected as a change in the transmitted light intensity due to the field-induced spectral shift of the interference fringes of the transparent conductive oxide electrode layer on a glass substrate. The magnitude of the signal increased as it approached the ends of the electrode, and the sign reversed across the center of the electrode. The electric field distribution calculated from the interfacial potential difference due to the in-plane parallel current showed that an electric field perpendicular to the interface was induced, whose distribution was consistent with the position dependence of the Pockels signal. A similar phenomenon was also observed for a single copper electrode, confirming that this is a universal effect.

Funder

Grant in Aid for Scientific Researc

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

MDPI AG

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