4.2. Cyclic Voltammetry
Cyclic voltammograms for various potential scan rates, v, from 30 mV/s to 3 V/s (their values are indicated in the figures) are shown in
Figure 3a for the 2 M H
2SO
4 + 0.25 M HBr composition of the external solution and in
Figure S1 for the whole set of HBr concentrations. In all cases, each CV plot possesses a single maximum for both forward and backward potential sweeps which reflects either the transformation of Br
− (oxidation) at the electrode surface into Br
2 or a backward process (Br
2 reduction) in accordance with the scheme given by Equation (1) for X = Br.
The theoretical description of the diffusional transport over the course of the CV experiment has been developed mostly for systems where the redox-active component is dissolved in a semi-infinite medium (which is usually considered as an electrolyte solution), while the transport takes place inside this medium to/from its boundary with the electrode. Results of such a consideration can be immediately applied to the problem of the diffusional transport inside a spatially restricted medium, e.g., inside a layer of a finite thickness, L, only if its value, L, is much larger than the thickness of the nonstationary diffusion layer, δD. It should be kept in mind that the latter changes strongly in the course of the CV measurement: δD(t), where δD is of the order of δD(tpf) ~ (D RT/F v)1/2 within the initial time interval, which includes the range of the forward peak while it is extending during the further time interval as δD(t) ~ [D (t − tpf)]1/2; in particular, it is about δD(tpb) ~ (D tpf-pb)1/2 for the vicinity of the backward peak, where tpf and tpb are the time moments of passage of the forward or backward peaks, respectively, and tpf-pb is the time for the passage between the forward and backward peaks of current: tpf-pb = tpb − tpf.
For the system under study, the diffusion coefficients of both transporting species, Br− and Br2, inside the membrane are of the order of 10−6 cm2/s. Then, δD(tpf) ~ 10 µm for the scan rate of a few tens of mV/s, while δD(tpb) is greater by several times. It means that for the membrane thickness of 60 µm, this medium may be treated as semi-infinite for consideration of the shape of the forward peak (including the value of Ipf) for all studied scan rates (including 30 mV/s), while the CV shape after the passage of the forward peak is described properly by the semi-infinite model for scan rates of 100 mV/s and higher, whereas it should be strongly modified for 30 mV/s. The correctness of this analysis is demonstrated in this section below.
One should emphasize that this reactional scheme corresponds to the
non-unity stoichiometry, Equation (2), i.e., the stoichiometric numbers of its Red (Br
−) and Ox (Br
2) species are
different: n
Red = 2, n
Ox = 1, and n = 2. According to the theory of such processes at the interface of an electrode and a
semi-infinite solution under conditions of their
reversible behavior [
45], most of their
qualitative features are
different from those for conventional processes of the
unity stoichiometry, Ox + n e
− = Red.
For example, the predicted difference between the peak potentials of the forward (oxidation) and backward (reduction) branches for the process given by Equation (2) (see Figure 1a and Table 1 of [
45]) is around 43 mV for 25 °C, instead of 59 mV (n = 1) or 29.5 (n = 2) for the conventional redox processes. The experimental value, 44 mV, for the lowest HBr concentration, 0.125 M, and the optimal potential scan rate, 100 mV/s, in
Figure 3a agrees perfectly with the theoretical one. An increase of the HBr concentration in the external solution leads (for the same scan rate) to greater values of the peak-to-peak separation, which may be related to the increase of the peak current and, correspondingly, of the shifts of both peak potentials (in opposite directions) due to ohmic effects.
For each HBr concentration, an increase of the potential scan rate results in diminution of the peak-to-peak distance. This tendency is opposite to that for redox reactions at the electrode/solution interface, where this peak-to-peak separation increases for higher scan rates because of ohmic effects. For the system under study, there is a novel effect which originates from a non-perfect morphology of the electrode/membrane interface where lacunas of solution are present (expectedly, due to the microroughness of the surfaces of the media in contact), which give an extra contribution to the current within a very short time range (this point is discussed in detail in the section below on chronoamperometry), thus shifting the backward peak to earlier time values and diminishing the peak-to-peak separation.
Another effect which is absent for reactions at conventional electrochemical interfaces manifests itself at the
lowest scan rate, 30 mV/s, see the corresponding plot, e.g., in
Figure 3c, where the current of each CV plot in
Figure 3a has been divided by v
1/2 so that the black line for 30 mV/s becomes well-visible. One may see an obvious difference of this plot from all those for higher scan rates within the potential range between the forward and backward peaks: instead of the current diminution in time according to the Cottrell law, the black line approaches
a constant value corresponding to the
steady-state current. It is in full agreement with the above estimation of the nonstationary diffusion layer thickness, which predicts the diffusion layer extension for such a scan rate up to the
whole membrane region. As a result, the theory [
45] derived for the semi-infinite solution region is
not applicable for this scan rate within the potential range after passage of the forward peak. Due to this anomalous shape, the peak-to-peak separation for 30 mV/s and the 0.125 M HBr concentration (48 mV) becomes slightly larger than the prediction (43 mV).
According to the theory [
45], variation of the potential scan rate, v, for a fixed reagent concentration should change the current as v
1/2 for any value of the potential. The standard method to test this prediction is to plot the peak current for the forward scan, I
pa, as a function of v
1/2. One can see from
Figure 3b that this proportionality between I
pa and v
1/2 is observed for the sufficiently low scan rates, up to 300 mV/s, while there is a marked deviation for higher scan rates. One can also use a more advanced procedure which allows one to analyze this prediction within the whole range of potentials. It means that experimental CV data for various scan rates, v, should become
overlapping if the current for each potential is divided by v
1/2 (“normalized voltammograms”).
Figure 3c presents such plots, I/v
1/2 vs. E, for CV data in
Figure 3a. One can see a practical coincidence of the plots in
Figure 3c for various scan rates within the rising branch of the forward scan, which also takes place within the forward peak region for
lower scan rates (up to 300 mV/s). The reason for the deviation of the black line for 30 mV/s between the forward and backward peaks has been discussed above, while the plots for the other scan rates are almost coincident within this potential range.
In conformity with
Figure 3b, the plots for higher scan rates, 1 and 3 V/s, in
Figure 3c show an
upward deviation within the maximum region, while they are close to those for lower scan rates (except for that for 30 mV/s, see above) outside this potential range. One may attribute this effect to the observations over the course of
chronoamperometric measurements (see the next section), where
upward deviations from the Cottrell-type behavior have been found within
the shortest time range (around 0.01 s and lower). Probably, this
excessive oxidation charge is related to one of the above new effects: The existence of
solution-filled lacunas at the electrode/membrane boundary manifests itself in the course of the cyclic voltammetry as
increasing intensity of the current near its peak. Their contribution to the peak current becomes relatively significant at such
high scan rates because of a small thickness of the nonstationary diffusion layer, in combination with the short duration of the peak passage.
Similar tendencies are observed for analogs of
Figure 3b,c for the other HBr concentrations.
In conformity with theoretical predictions [
45], the peak potential values for the forward scan, E
pa, are practically independent of the scan rate (for the range from 0.03 to 1 V/s) for all HBr concentrations.
Predictions of the theory [
45] on the dependence of CV plots on the bulk solution concentration of the reagent, c
0 (shown in
Figure 3d for the scan rate of 100 mV/s and in
Figure S2 for all scan rates), are essentially different, compared to those for conventional electron-transfer reactions, Ox + n e
− = Red. According to them, variation of the HBr concentration in the solution should lead not only to the proportional change of the peak-current intensities but also to a
shift of the whole plot to the left for higher concentrations.
Figure 3e is prepared in conformity with the standard method to verify the proportionality prediction via plotting the peak current for the forward scan vs. the HBr concentration in the external solution, c
0 (assuming the
equilibrium HBr concentration inside the membrane, B*, is proportional to c
0), where the straight line confirms the agreement with the prediction. More detailed information is provided in
Figure 3e, which considers that the theory predicts this dependence on the concentration not only for the peak current but also for any potential. It is why the values of the CV current in
Figure 3f are divided by the HBr concentration in the external solution, c
0 (“normalized voltammograms” of another type). One can see from this figure that both principal predictions of the theory [
45] have been confirmed: (1) increase of the concentration results in a
progressive shift to the left of the whole CV plot, and (2) if these plots are shifted back to make the forward peak potentials superimposed, i.e., plotted vs. E—E
pa, then they become very close to each other within the whole potential range, with a small variation of the amplitude along the Y-axis (which manifests itself as a slight deviation of points from the straight line in
Figure 3e).
Thus, one can conclude on a good agreement of experimental CV data for the system under study with theoretical predictions [
45] for redox reactions of the non-unity stoichiometry of the type given by Equation (2) as a whole. The best correspondence for the forward peak current, I
pa, to Equation (5) is ensured by the lowest scan rates, 0.03 and 0.1 V/s. These values for I
pa have been used to calculate the CCV parameters, Equation (22), for various HBr concentrations. In the next section, they will be compared with the CC
B values for the same HBr concentrations found from chronoamperometric measurements. Then, these parameters will be used to determine the principal parameters of the system, D
B and K.
4.3. Chronoamperometry: X− Oxidation Stage
During this stage, the electrode/membrane/solution system where bromide anions are uniformly distributed inside the membrane in equilibrium with the external solution is subjected to a large-amplitude potential step at t = 0 to a sufficiently positive potential value, which induces a rapid oxidation of species B (Br
−) at the electrode surface so that their local concentration inside the membrane in the vicinity of the membrane/electrode boundary becomes close to zero. Temporal variation of the current (called “current transients” below), I
B(t), within the time range: t > 0, after the potential step is shown for various HBr concentrations of the external solution, c
0 (indicated inside the figure), in
Figure 4a as well as in
Figure 4b in the bilogarithmic coordinates, which allows one to analyze the behavior within the whole time range from 10
−4 to 100 s.
According to
Figure 4b, there are two characteristic time intervals where the behavior of current transients for the HBr concentrations between 0.125 and 0.75 M is totally different. Monotonously decreasing branches are visible within the
short-time range, up to a few seconds. Within a
longer-time range, from about 10 s, the current, I
B(t), approaches a constant value, i.e., a steady-state current, I
ss.
The current transient for the highest HBr concentration of the external solution, 1.0 M (
Figure 4a), demonstrates
anomalous features. In particular, the current passes
through a minimum within the intermediate time range (about 6.7 s), followed by a
monotonous increase of the current within a more extended range, without a well-expressed plateau behavior.
The values of I
ss (where the value of the current at the end of the measurement period is used as I
ss for the highest HBr concentration, c
0 = 1.0 M) are plotted in
Figure 2b as a function of the concentration, c
0. One should note a very good agreement between the values of I
ss and I
plateau (found from the steady-state voltammetry) for the concentration interval between 0.125 and 0.75 M, as well as the proportionality of these values to the concentration (proximity to the straight line in
Figure 2b). On the contrary, the values of I
ss and I
plateau for the highest HBr concentration are noticeably different. This point for I
ss in
Figure 2b is located almost perfectly at the same straight line, i.e., it satisfies the proportionality property. However, the
sloped shape of the current transient for this concentration (
Figure 4a) within the time interval over 10 s provides strong evidence in favor of the conclusion that this coincidence is of an
accidental nature, i.e., if the duration of this stage
were different from the chosen value, 120 s, then this final value of the current would be quite different. One may also pay attention to the observation of the steady-state voltammetry for this concentration (
Figure 2a) that
the plateau is also inclined, i.e., one cannot find a
reliable value for
the steady-state current, while this information is necessary for the determination of the principal parameters, D
B and K. Moreover, the found values of the CC
B and CCV parameters for this concentration which characterize the short-time response (see below) are very far from each other, while the CC
B value is also needed for this calculation via Equation (23). Thus, we excluded the data for the highest concentration, 1.0 M, from the further analysis, in particular, from
Figure 4c–f.
According to Equation (11), the steady-state current, I
ss, depends on the product of three parameters, D
B, K, and c
0. One can see from
Figure 2b that the proportionality of the steady-state current to the bulk solution concentration, c
0, is confirmed for the HBr concentration range between 0.125 and 0.75 M. It implies that the product, D
B K, is practically independent of the HBr concentration.
To determine the values of another parameter of the process, CC
B, defined by Equation (20), plots of
Figure 4b have been represented in the form of the dependence, log (I
B t
1/2) vs. log t (
Figure 4c), where the Cottrell behavior of the current transient should give a constant value, CC
B ≅ I
B t
1/2, Equation (19). Indeed, expected horizontal segments are evidently visible in
Figure 4c within a broad time range (from 10
−3 or 10
−2 s to several seconds, depending on the HBr concentration), while the stages of the process both before and after this time range have distinctive features. In particular, the upward deviation from the horizontal line at relatively long-time values is evidently due to the gradual transition of the X
− concentration profile in the membrane and of the passing current from the Cottrell type, Equation (19), to the stationary (i.e., linear) concentration distribution throughout the membrane and to the steady-state current, Equation (11).
The deviation from the Cottrell behavior within the shorter time interval originated from processes that are not considered by the Cottrell model [
46] deserves a more detailed analysis. Within the region of the shortest time interval (below 10
−3 s), a time-independent current is observed (
Figure 4b), which, moreover, does not depend on the HBr concentration. It is apparently unrelated to the bromide discharge. Within the subsequent time interval (of the order of 10
−3–10
−2 s), prior to the beginning of the Cottrell time range having the slope of ½ (from 10
−2 s to several seconds), a sharp decrease of the current is observed in
Figure 4b, where its value already significantly depends on the HBr concentration.
Figure 4c shows that the product, I t
1/2, passes through a
maximum within this region.
To interpret the non-monotonous dependence of these experimental transients on time (for the coordinates of
Figure 4c) for the membrane-coated electrode, similar measurements have been carried out for the uncoated electrode (without membrane) under identical conditions. The comparison of transients for these two systems (with and without membrane) in
Figure 4c reveals that they
coincide within the shortest time interval; then, from some time moment dependent on the HBr concentration, the bromide oxidation current at the membrane-coated electrode becomes much weaker than that without membrane for the same HBr concentration. One can also note that both the height of the maximum in
Figure 4c and the time moment of its passage are shifted as a function of the HBr concentration.
These observations can be explained by the fact that microvolumes of the solution (
lacunae) remain between the adjacent surfaces of the electrode and the membrane after assembly of the working electrode (
Figure 1), due to their imperfect smoothness (depressions and protrusions). One should expect that the solution in the lacunae initially has the same concentration of the electroactive component, bromide, as the external solution, while the total surface area of the electrode in contact with the lacunae is much smaller than its total surface area, A. It allows us to explain both the dependence of the increasing branches of the curves in
Figure 4c for the electrode/membrane system on the HBr concentration and significantly lower values of the current for it within this time range, compared to that for the uncoated electrode. For the electrode/solution system without membrane, the product, I·t
1/2, for each HBr concentration in
Figure 4c
immediately approaches a constant value, CC
B, Equation (19), for the solution after moving away from the universal straight line, while the corresponding graphs for the electrode/membrane/solution system drop sharply after passing their maxima. This decline due to the rapid depletion of bromide in the lacunae is followed by reaching a much smaller “Cottrell constant”, CC
B, for the membrane in
Figure 4c. Under this assumption, the total solution volume in these lacunae can be estimated from the amount of the excessive charge within the time interval when the plot in
Figure 4c is above the horizontal CC
B line. Results of such an estimate, recalculated in terms of the effective thickness of the lacunae layer (as if it extends uniformly along the whole electrode surface), i.e., of the “gap” between the membrane and the electrode surfaces, do not exceed a few µm, i.e., they are comparable to the particle size of the abrasive used for polishing the metal. This coincidence testifies in favor of the proposed explanation of the non-monotonous behavior of current transients in
Figure 4c within the short-time range.
Due to very small values of both the passing current and the duration of this time interval, the charge of this segment of the transient is very low, compared to that within the Cottrell region, especially in comparison with the total charge of the process. Therefore, the existence of this deviation does not significantly affect the treatment within this region and, consequently, results of further calculations of the principal parameters of the system, DB and K, based on CCB values, with the use of Equation (23), discussed below.
The CC
B parameter for each solution composition has been determined as the value of I
B t
1/2 within the time range of
its constancy, which extends in
Figure 4c from around 0.01 s to several seconds. Values of the CCV parameter, i.e., an analog of the CC
B parameter, have also been found from CV data (peak current for the forward scan, I
pa) in
Figure 3 and
Figure S1 with the use of Equation (22) for each HBr concentration and each scan rate.
Figure 4d represents experimental data for CC
B and CCV for each external HBr solution as functions of the bulk solution HBr concentration, c
0. One can conclude on the proximity of the CCV data for lowest scan rates, 0.03 and 0.1 V/s, between each other as well as to the corresponding CC
B value for the HBr concentrations from 0.125 to 0.75 M, while there is a marked upward shift of CCV values for larger scan rates, especially for 1 and 3 V/s (as a direct consequence of larger I
pa/c
0 values in
Figure 3c) for all HBr concentrations.
One may note that the intensive oxidation of Br
− at the electrode under the CV regime only starts in the vicinity of the E
1/2 potential, i.e., slightly before the current maximum, where the characteristic time of the Br
− consumption is around RT/Fv, i.e., below 0.01 s for v = 3 V/s and around 0.025 s for v = 1 V/s. It is the time range (below 0.01 or 0.02 s depending on the HBr concentration) where
Figure 4c shows a
strong upward deviation from the Cottrell horizontal line, attributed above as originated from a micrometer-thick lacunae layer. Thus, the larger CCV values for the two highest scan rates are related to the excessive current due to the oxidation of X
− species inside these lacunae. This is why our further analysis will be based on the CCV data for
the lowest scan rates, 0.03 and 0.1 V/s, which are in a good agreement with independent CC
B data (
Figure 4d) for all HBr concentrations up to 0.75 M.
According to the theoretical model, values of the CC
B and CCV parameters should be proportional to the product, K c
0 D
B1/2. Experimental data in
Figure 4d as well as in
Figure 4e (where the ratios of CC
B or CCV to c
0 are practically independent of c
0, especially for CC
B and for CCV at low scan rates) show a good proportionality between their values and the bulk solution HBr concentration, c
0. It means that the product, K D
B1/2, does not vary essentially within this range of c
0. This conclusion matches well to that on another product, K D
B, based on the above analysis of data for the steady-state current.
For each composition of the external solution, i.e., for each HBr concentration, c
0, the shape of the theoretical chronoamperogram, I(t), depends on several parameters of the system, see
Section 3.5 (X
− oxidation for scheme (1)). Their values are considered as known for some of them: F, R, T (293 °C), n = 2, n
B = 2, A (7.9 10
−3 cm
2), c
0 (from 0.125 to 0.75 M), and L (58 µm). The values of two other parameters are to be found via a comparison of these theoretical predictions with experimental data for each HBr concentration given in
Figure 4a: the diffusion coefficient, D
B, of the reactive species, B (X
− for the system under consideration), inside the membrane, and the distribution coefficient for this species at its equilibrium across the membrane/solution boundary, K.
Several independent procedures (B1 to B3) have been developed in our study for determination of the DB and K values for each c0 concentration. They are based on different experimental characteristics described by the relations derived above in the theoretical section so that the subsequent comparison of the obtained values allows one to enhance the precision of the results.
Procedure B1: It is based on expressions (20) for CC
B and (11) for I
ss. Their values have been determined from experimental data, see
Figure 4d and
Figure 2b, and provided in column B1 of
Table 1. This procedure combines data for very short and extended time ranges. Equation (23) provides values of both D
B and K, see column B1 in
Table 2.
Procedure B2: It is based on calculations of the “nonstationary charge”, Q
B(ns), by integration of I
B(ns)(t), i.e., of the deviation of the nonstationary current, I
B(t), from the steady-state one, I
ss, between 0 and the time range where they become very close to one another, Equations (16), (14) and (15). Effectively, the value of Q
B(ns) is found as the limit of the expression: the integral of I
B(t) between 0 and t
ss minus the product, t
ss I
B(t
ss), for sufficiently large t
ss values. The values of Q
B(ns) for various HBr concentrations are provided in column B2 of
Table 1. Then, the final expression for Q
B(ns) in Equation (16) immediately provides the values of K for various c
0, as seen in column B2 of
Table 2.
Procedure B3: It is based on the presentation of the data in
Figure 4a in semilogarithmic coordinates, log [I
B(ns)(t)/I
ss] vs. t, for each HBr concentration. According to Equation (15), this plot for a sufficiently large time range should be close to a straight line passing through the origin. The value of the slope of this line, which should be equal to π
2 D
B/(2.30 L
2), Equation (15), is indicated for each HBr concentration, c
0, in column B3 of
Table 1. In turn, it provides values of D
B, see column B3 in
Table 2.
Table 2 shows that various methods for finding the diffusion coefficient of bromide and its distribution coefficient between the membrane and the solution yield similar values for them for each HBr concentration. This self-consistency of the conclusions based on different treatment procedures, B1 to B3, has enabled us to conclude that the theoretical description used based on the nonstationary Fick equation provides a substantiated foundation for the bromide transport during the stage of its oxidation.
Moreover, the variation of values for each parameter as a function of the HBr concentration within the range from 0.125 to 0.75 M has turned out to be insignificant. Therefore, we have averaged all the results for each of these two parameters within the whole concentration range and obtained the following mean values: DB = (2.98 ± 0.27)·10−6 cm2/s and K = 0.19 ± 0.005.
4.4. Chronoamperometry: X2 Reduction Stage
Variation of the nonstationary current in time, I
C vs. t, after the second large-amplitude potential step (from 1.0 to 0.4 V) is shown in
Figure 5a in the bilogarithmic coordinates (
decimal logarithm is used again). Plots for the HBr concentrations in the external solution, c
0, within the range between 0.125 and 0.75 M have approximately the same shape, being displaced along the
Y-axis. This feature is in agreement with the theoretical prediction on the proportionality of the current to the concentration, c
0, Equation (28) for I
C and Equation (11) for I
ss. This behavior breaks down within the time range over 10 s since the intensity of the current becomes too weak for its reliable measurement.
The shape of current transients in
Figure 5a depends on the same parameters given above for the stage of X
− oxidation as well as on
a single new parameter, the diffusion coefficient of species C (X
2) inside the membrane, D
C. Similar to the preceding section, we have elaborated
several independent procedures (C1 to C3) for treating experimental data in
Figure 5a in order to determine the value of D
C for each HBr concentration, c
0. Since they are based on the data inside different time ranges, the subsequent comparison of the values of D
C represents an important criterion of the applicability of the theoretical model and (if the model is found to be applicable) to increase the precision of the value of this transport parameter.
Procedure C1: It is based on the treatment of the transient data for the sufficiently short time range. As it is discussed in detail in the theoretical section, there is
no extended time range of the Cottrell behavior because of the
spatial variation of the initial concentration profile, C
ss(x), Equation (24). This is why one has to use plots in the coordinates, t
1/2 I
C vs t
1/2, since Equation (32) predicts a
linear dependence for them, with the slope equal to −I
ss. Since the value of the steady-state current, I
ss, has been found in the course of the previous stage (see
Table 1), for each HBr concentration, c
0, it is advantageous to plot the data for the short-time interval with the use of the coordinates, where the slope is equal to −1 and the intercept of the Y-axis determines the value of L/(π D
C)
1/2 (see Equation (32)). Experimental data plotted in
Figure 5b are in perfect agreement with this prediction for c
0 = 0.125 M, while the slope is slightly larger for the higher HBr concentrations. The values of the intercept, L/(π D
C)
1/2, found by the extrapolation of data in
Figure 5b to the initial time moment, t = 0, are provided in column C1 of
Table 3. The recalculated values of the diffusion coefficient, D
C, in column C1 of
Table 4 are very close to each other for all concentrations.
Procedure C2: The values of the total reduction charge, Q
C, have been calculated via integration of the current transients in
Figure 5a, Equation (30), for each HBr concentration. Their values are provided in column C2 of
Table 3. According to Equation (30), the ratio of the steady-state current and of the X
2 reduction charge, I
ss/Q
C = 3 D
C/L
2, immediately gives the value of D
C for each HBr concentration, see column C2 of
Table 4.
Procedure C3: It is based on the long-time behavior of current transients in
Figure 5a. According to Equation (34), −log [I
C/2 I
ss] varies linearly in time, its slope being equal to π
2 D
C t/(2.30 L
2) for the decimal logarithm, while its extrapolation towards the initial time moment, t = 0, is equal to 0.
Figure 5c demonstrates a confirmation of this prediction, especially for the lowest HBr concentration. Column C3 of
Table 3 presents the value of the slope for each HBr concentration. One may conclude on a slight increase of its value for higher concentrations. Calculated values of D
C are provided in column C3 of
Table 4.
Mean D
C values have been found by averaging those for various procedures of the data treatment, C1 to C3, in
Table 4. They do not reveal a significant variation as a function of the HBr concentration in the external solution, c
0, within the range under consideration. Therefore, the mean value of D
C for this concentration range has been determined by averaging the results for various concentrations: D
C = (1.10 ± 0.07) 10
−6 cm
2/s.
The values of the Br
− and Br
2 transport parameters, D
B = D(Br
−) = (2.98 ± 0.27) 10
−6 cm
2/s, D
C = D(Br
2) = (1.10 ± 0.07) 10
−6 cm
2/s, and K = K(Br
−) = 0.19 ± 0.005, within this range of HBr concentrations in the external solution (
Table 2 and
Table 4) show a good correlation with those obtained earlier for the transport of components of the bromine–bromide mixed solution across membranes of a similar type: D = 1.45 10
−6 cm
2/s and K = 0.29 [
17,
47]. It is hardly possible to expect a closer agreement of our results with the earlier ones since the quoted papers dealt with the
bromine transport in the presence of
high bromide concentrations, with the
tribromide formation, so that it is not clear which of these components gave the main contribution to the diffusion inside the membrane. Besides, sulfuric acid was not added, unlike the case of our studies.