Journal of Physical Chemistry A, Vol.109, No.6, 965-969, 2005
On the chemical and electrochemical one-electron reduction of peroxynitrous acid
Peroxynitrous acid was reduced by cathodic linear sweep voltammetry at a gold electrode and by iodide at pH 3.2 and 5.6. The cathodic reduction wave was identified by measuring its decay in time, which was the same as observed by optical spectroscopy. The iodide oxidation was followed by optical measurement of the triiodide formation. Both reductions show one-electron stoichiometry, with the product n(alpha)alpha = 0.23 +/- 0.04 from the electrochemical experiments, in which alpha is the transfer coefficient and n(alpha) the number of electrons transferred, and an diiodine yield of ca. 0.5 equiv per equivalent of peroxynitrous acid. The voltammetric reduction was irreversible up to scan rates of 80 V s(-1). Both reductions were pH independent in the range studied. The voltammetric reduction is most likely an irreversible elemental reaction followed by a chemical decay that cannot be observed directly. Because of the pH independence, we conclude that both reductions have a common short-lived intermediate, namely [HOONO](.-). We estimate the electrode potential of the likely ONOOH/ONOOH.- couple to be larger than 1 V. The commonly used electrode potential Edegrees(ONOOH, H+/NO2., H2O) does not describe the chemistry of peroxynitrous acid.