I need to find out the oxidation and reduction potential of Copper.
Oxidation of Cu(0) into Cu(+1) and Cu(+2) and reduction of Cu(+2) into Cu(0) and Cu(+1) are the details that I want to find out, explained by the following reactions as well
Cu+2 ---> Cu0 or Cu+1
Cu0----> Cu+1 or Cu+2
from the peak current values in cyclic voltammetry is that the same oxidation and reduction potential were expressed ?
Maybe I am missing something but basically from a CV you get the oxidation peak and the potential value for this peak at the certain temperature, pH is the oxidation potential. The same goes for the reduction. For a reversible species (Eox+Ered)/2= oxidation-reduction potential. If you do it in the standard condition it will be the standard ox-red potential.
I agree with Cornel, CV is not a good way to find the standard electrode potentials. Approximately, we can use CV of a reversible system to determine its formal potential (Eo'): Eo' = (Epa + Epc)/2.
Note that the formal potential is not a true standard electrode potential.
Standard potentials (Eo) refer to states that can never be achieved in practice, namely ideal 1.0 M solutions. A very dilute solution can be reasonably assumed to be ideal (activity coefficient = 1). Very solutions less than 10-2 M, we can use Debye-Hückel Theory to calculate activity coefficients. More concentrated than that, and there is no theory available to do the calculation. Empirical coefficients are necessary. One way around this problem is with Formal Potentials.