Electrode holder with a platinum plate electrode in order to provide good conductivity, corrosion resistance and high purity.
The replaceable multi-purpose 10 x 15 mm platinum plate electrode holder gives access to various working electrodes such as ITO/FTO conductive glass, carbon nanomaterials including graphene sheets, 2D nanoparticles and ultra-thin films, quantum dots, semiconducting polymer films or any other conductive electrode materials.
Platinum plate electrode holder is particularly useful for electrochemical and photoelectrochemical studies of pre-prepared films of dyes, polymers and other semiconducting materials on different substrates for the application of polymer solar cells, dye-sensitised solar cells and perovskite solar cells. A good example of that is the platinum plate electrode holder can be used to hold the dye-sensitised photoanode in a photoelectrochemical cell leading to the splitting of water.
Platinum was known to the native South Americans before the arrival of Christopher Columbus and was introduced to Europe around the year 1750.
Platinum is a member of the platinoid group. It is a lustrous, malleable and ductile metal, its abundance in the Earth's crust is approximately 0.001ppm.
It is the most important metal of a group of six (Pt, Pd, Os, Ir, Rh and Ru). It is not affected by oxygen or water and is only soluble in aqua regia or molten alkalis.
The applications for platinum are numerous and varied, for example it is used to make standards of weights and measures, it is used in the electronic industry for electrical contacts subject to elevated temperatures and in the manufacture of electrodes subject to chemical attacks.
This product is only supplied on demand, and its price is calculated based on the platinum futures market, being 950 USD for the price shown.
Therefore, a specific economic proposal will be made if it is of interest to you, and the offered price will be respected as long as it does not experience an increase of more than 5% to the 950 USD of the contract in the platinum futures market, being the final price adjusted to the variation that occurs if it is greater, and also in the event of a decrease in the contract price greater than 5% of the absolute value.