Potentiostatic EIS - Constant Illumination

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Potentiostatic EIS - Constant Illumination

Description

The Potentiostatic EIS - Constant Illumination experiment is useful for kinetic studies of DCCs while a light source with constant light intensity shines on the cell.

 

Gamry tip bulb

Please see Gamry's Application Notes for more information about measurements on DSSCs:

Dye Solar Cells – Part 1: Basic principles and measurements

Dye Solar Cells – Part 2: Impedance measurements

Dye Solar Cells – Part 3: IMPS and IMVS measurements

 

Potentiostatic EIS

The Potentiostatic EIS technique is used to characterize an electrochemical interface which is held at a fixed potential. A small-signal AC potential excitation is applied to an electrochemical cell. The phase-sensitive AC response of the interface is measured as the frequency of the excitation signal is varied.

 

EIS is a particularly powerful tool for the study of corrosion of coated metals. It is also useful in almost every other area of electrochemistry, including research in batteries, electrode kinetics, and industrial electrolysis.

 

The output of an EIS experiment is a complex impedance spectrum. The term complex is used in its mathematical sense: containing both real and imaginary terms. An EIS spectrum is usually graphed as either a Bode plot (impedance magnitude and phase plotted against frequency) or a Nyquist plot (imaginary impedance plotted against real impedance). Analysis of the impedance spectrum can give you the following information:

 

Polarization resistance

Double-layer capacitance

Solution resistance

Coating-defect parameters

Mechanistic and kinetic information

 

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