Hanging mercury drop electrode


The hanging mercury drop electrode is a working electrode variation on the dropping mercury electrode. Experiments run with dropping mercury electrodes are referred to as forms of polarography. If the experiments are performed at an electrode with a constant surface it is referred as voltammetry.
Like other working electrodes these electrodes are used in electrochemical studies using three electrode systems when investigating reaction mechanisms related to redox chemistry among other chemical phenomenon.

Distinction

The hanging mercury drop electrode produces a partial mercury drop of controlled geometry and surface area at the end of a capillary in contrast to the dropping mercury electrode which steadily releases drops of mercury during an experiment. The disadvantages a DME experiences due to a constantly changing surface are not experienced by the HMDE since it has static surface area during an experiment. The static surface of the HMDE means it is more likely to suffer from the surface adsorption phenomenon than a DME. Unlike solid electrodes which need to be cleaned and polished between most experiments, the self-renewing HMDE can simply release the contaminated drop and grow a clean drop between each experiment.