1999
DOI: 10.2116/analsci.15.3
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Kinetics of Photoinduced Charge Transfer at Microscopic and Macroscopic Interfaces

Abstract: Charge transfer at a liquid-liquid interface is the key process in a variety of chemical and biochemical processes. The kinetics of electron and proton transfer was investigated at micro-and macroscopic interfaces. Experimentally, these techniques are very distinct due to different approaches in measuring the interfacial potential. Nevertheless, three processes, i.e. generation of charge carriers, diffusion and interfacial transfer, constitute three principal steps of charge separation, and are similar regardl… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…The concept of photochemical charge separation at a liquid–liquid interface was also investigated in the nineties by Kotov and Kuzmin, who published a series of papers where one of the products of a photochemical reaction near a liquid–liquid interface was extracted to the adjacent phase. If the transferring photoproduct was an ionic species, then a current could be measured across the soft interface.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The concept of photochemical charge separation at a liquid–liquid interface was also investigated in the nineties by Kotov and Kuzmin, who published a series of papers where one of the products of a photochemical reaction near a liquid–liquid interface was extracted to the adjacent phase. If the transferring photoproduct was an ionic species, then a current could be measured across the soft interface.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Microphase (pseudophase) model considers aqueous solutions of surfactants (including micelles, vesicles, and so forth) as the two phase systems, containing volume phase (predominantly aqueous phase) and microphase (surfactant molecules together with counterions and reactant molecules). Local concentrations of the reactants inside the microphase can be several orders of magnitude greater than their apparent concentrations in the total solution. Main effects of this solubilization on the reaction kinetics are caused by the enhanced concentration of reactants as well as by local medium properties of the microphase.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[7][8][9][10] The diffusion process of electrons and holes has attracted intensive attention being the key process in a variety of applications, e.g., thermoelectric devices, 11 dye-sensitized solar cells, 12 gas-sensors, 13 light-emitting devices, 14 and photocatalysts, 15 Thus far, the internal electric field is predominantly responsible for the charge separation and transfer orientation of electrons (diffusion process of electrons) on the basis of thermodynamics. 16 This diffusion process of electron-hole pairs restricted by an internal electric field has been widely involved in photocatalysis, especially for layered compounds. [17][18][19] For example, Jiang et al attribute the facet-dependent photo-reactivity of BiOCl single-crystalline nanosheets to efficient charge separation and transfer along the [001] direction in the nanosheets induced by internal electric fields.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%