eutech-instruments cyanide epoxy User Manual

Page of 18
Instruction Manual 
 
Cyanide Electrode
 
 
13
Electrode Operation 
 
Eutech Cyanide Ion Electrodes consist of a solid membrane containing a mixture of inorganic silver 
compounds bonded into the tip of a glass or epoxy electrode body. An electrode potential develops 
across the membrane when the electrode is in contact with solution containing cyanide ions and is 
capable of measuring free cyanide ions. This potential is measured against a constant reference 
potential, using a standard pH/mV meter or an ion meter. The Nernst equation describes the level of 
cyanide ions in solution corresponding to the measured potential: 
 
E = Eo - S log X 
 
where: 
E  = measured electrode potential 
Eo = reference potential (a constant) 
S  = electrode slope (
∼57 mV/decade) 
X  = level of cyanide ions in solution 
 
The activity, X, represents the effective concentration of free cyanide ions in the solution. Total 
cyanide concentration, Ct, may include some bound as well as free cyanide ions. Since the electrode 
only responds to free ions, the concentration of the free ions, Cf, is found by: 
 
Cf = Ct - Cb 
 
where Cb represents the concentration of all bound or complexed cyanide ions. 
 
The activity is related to the free ion concentration, Cf, by the activity coefficient, γ , by: 
 
X = 
γ Cf 
 
Activity coefficients vary, depending on total ionic strength, I, defined as: 
 
I = ½ 
Σ CxZx
2
 
  where: 
Cx = concentration of ion X 
Zx = charge of ion X 
 
Σ  = sum of all of the types of ions in the solution 
 
In the case of high and constant ionic strength relative to the sensed ion concentration, the activity 
coefficient, 
γ , is constant and the activity, X, is directly proportional to the concentration. 
All samples and standards containing cyanide ions have ionic strength adjuster (ISA) added so that 
the background ionic strength is high and constant relative to variable concentrations of cyanide. 
The recommended ISA for the cyanide electrode is sodium hydroxide, NaOH, though other basic 
solutions can be used as long as they do not contain ions that would interfere with the electrode's 
response to cyanide. 
 
The reference electrode must also be considered. When two solutions of different composition are 
brought into contact with one another, liquid junction potentials arise. Millivolt potentials occur 
from the inter-diffusion of ions in the two solutions. Electrode charge will be carried unequally 
across the solution boundary resulting in a potential difference between the two solutions, since