There are other problems too.
Firstly, the electrochemical series only works for aqueous solutions. Liquid phosphoric acid has no water in it, so everything falls apart. The H+ refers to a proton solvated in WATER. Not phosphoric acid; the H+ there would be H4PO4+, and I have no idea how good phosphoric acid is at protonating itself (pure H2SO4 has an auto-dissociation constant of 10^-4 ish, in contrast to water's 10^-14)
Secondly, phosphoric acid is not a liquid at 101.3 kPa and 298 K. We already don't have standard conditions there.
Thirdly, if you had liquid phosphoric acid, phosphoric acid is considered "pure". Then, we wouldn't use concentrations anymore, but chemical activities, and those are slightly more trippy to deal with, especially as phosphoric acid has undergone a phase change.