Chlorite (ClO2
-) is one of the few simple aqueous anions that forms a stable product on one-electron oxidation.
The heterogeneous charge transfer rate constants at E° = 0.700 V vs SCE for the ClO2
-/ClO2 redox couple
have been measured at Au, Pt, and glassy carbon electrodes in aqueous KNO3 solutions using rotating disk
and ac voltammetry techniques between 10 and 30 °C. At 25 °C in 1.0 M KNO3 and pH = 7, the standard
heterogeneous rate constants k
el were measured as 0.015 ± 0.001 cm/s and 0.014 ± 0.003 cm/s, respectively,
at Au and reduced Pt electrodes. The transfer coefficient α on gold was measured to be 0.50 ± 0.01 using
ac voltammetry. The heterogeneous rate constants obtained with the use of a glassy carbon electrode were
slower (0.0079 ± 0.001 cm/s at 25 °C). The measured activation free energy for electron transfer at a gold
electrode was 25 ± 3.3 kJ/mol with a preexponential factor of 310(+900/−230) cm/s. Heterogeneous rate
constants of experiments performed in D2O solvent were only slightly slower than those measured in H2O,
indicating that the redox couple does not exhibit differential hydrogen bonding. Digital simulation of cyclic
voltammograms, with k
el determined from the ac voltammetry and rotating disk techniques, gave good
agreement with experiment. Marcus theory was applied to understand the unexpected slow heterogeneous
kinetics for this simple redox couple. Additionally, the preexponential factor in the semiclassical expression
describing heterogeneous electron transfer was examined. The slow electron transfer process is primarily
attributed to a small preexponential factor that may arise from a high degree of nonadiabaticity in the electron
transfer process.