Class 12 Chemistry Project (Electochemistry)

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An electrochemical cell is a device that produces an electric

current from energy released by a spontaneous redox


reaction, this can be caused from electricity. This kind of cell
includes the Galvanic cell or Voltaic cell.
Electrochemical cells have two conductive electrodes (the
anode and the cathode). The anode is defined as the
electrode where oxidation occurs and the cathode is the
electrode where the reduction takes place. Electrodes can be
made from any sufficiently conductive materials, such as
metals, semiconductors, graphite. In between these
electrodes is the electrolyte, which contains ions that can
freely move.
The galvanic cell uses two different metal electrodes, each in
an electrolyte where the positively charged ions are the
oxidized form of the electrode metal. One electrode will
undergo oxidation (the anode) and the other will undergo
reduction (the cathode). The metal of the anode will oxidize,
going from an oxidation state of 0 (in the solid form) to a
positive oxidation state and become an ion. At the cathode,
the metal ion in solution will accept one or more electrons from
the cathode and the ion's oxidation state is reduced to 0. This
forms a solid metal that electrodeposits on the cathode. The
two electrodes must be electrically connected to each other,
allowing for a flow of electrons that leave the metal of the
anode and flow through this connection to the ions at the
surface of the cathode. This flow of electrons is an electric
current that can be used to do work, such as turn a motor or
power a light.
A galvanic cell whose electrodes are zinc and copper
submerged in zinc sulphate and copper sulphate,
respectively, is known as a Daniell cell.
Half reactions for a Daniell cell are these:
Zinc electrode (anode): Zn(s) → Zn2+(aq) + 2 e−
Copper electrode (cathode): Cu2+(aq) + 2 e− → Cu(s)
In this example, the anode is the zinc metal which is oxidized
(loses electrons) to form zinc ions in solution, and copper ions
accept electrons from the copper metal electrode and the ions
deposit at the copper cathode as an electropositive. This cell
forms a simple battery as it will spontaneously generate a flow
of electric current from the anode to the cathode through the
external connection. This reaction can be driven in reverse by
applying a voltage, resulting in the deposition of zinc metal at
the anode and formation of copper ions at the cathode.
To provide a complete electric circuit, there must also be an
ionic conduction path between the anode and cathode
electrolytes in addition to the electron conduction path. The
simplest ionic conduction path is to provide a liquid junction.
To avoid mixing between the two electrolytes, the liquid
junction can be provided through a porous plug that allows ion
flow while reducing electrolyte mixing. To further minimize
mixing of the electrolytes, a salt bridge can be used which
consists of an electrolyte saturated gel in an inverted U-tube.
As the negatively charged electrons flow in one direction
around this circuit, the positively charged metal ions flow in
the opposite direction in the electrolyte.
Electrochemical cell voltage is also referred to as
electromotive force or emf.
A cell diagram can be used to trace the path of the electrons
in the electrochemical cell. For example, here is a cell diagram
of a Daniell cell:
Zn(s) | Zn2+ (1M) || Cu2+ (1M) | Cu(s)
First, the reduced form of the metal to be oxidized at the
anode (Zn) is written. This is separated from its oxidized form
by a vertical line, which represents the limit between the
phases (oxidation changes). The double vertical lines
represent the saline bridge on the cell. Finally, the oxidized
form of the metal to be reduced at the cathode, is written,
separated from its reduced form by the vertical line. The
electrolyte concentration is given as it is an important variable
in determining the cell potential.
To allow prediction of the cell potential, presentations of
standard electrode potential are available. Such
presentations are referenced to the standard hydrogen
electrode (SHE). The standard hydrogen electrode
undergoes the reaction
2 H+(aq) + 2 e− → H2
which is shown as reduction but, in fact, the SHE can act as
either the anode or the cathode, depending on the relative
oxidation/reduction potential of the other electrode/electrolyte
combination. The term standard in SHE requires a supply of
hydrogen gas bubbled through the electrolyte at a pressure
of 1 atm and an acidic electrolyte with H+ activity equal to 1
(usually assumed to be [H+] = 1 mol/litre).
The SHE electrode can be connected to any other electrode
by a salt bridge to form a cell. If the second electrode is also
at standard conditions, then the measured cell potential is
called the standard electrode potential for the electrode. The
standard electrode potential for the SHE is zero, by definition.
The polarity of the standard electrode potential provides
information about the relative reduction potential of the
electrode compared to the SHE. If the electrode has a
positive potential with respect to the SHE, then that means it
is a strongly reducing electrode which forces the SHE to be
the anode (an example is Cu in aqueous CuSO4 with a
standard electrode potential of 0.337 V). Conversely, if the
measured potential is negative, the electrode is more
oxidizing than the SHE (such as Zn in ZnSO4 where the
standard electrode potential is −0.76 V).
Standard electrode potentials are usually tabulated as
reduction potentials. However, the reactions are reversible
and the role of a particular electrode in a cell depends on the
relative oxidation/reduction potential of both electrodes. The
oxidation potential for a particular electrode is just the
negative of the reduction potential. A standard cell potential
can be determined by looking up the standard electrode
potentials for both electrodes (sometimes called half cell
potentials). The one that is smaller will be the anode and will
undergo oxidation. The cell potential is then calculated as the
sum of the reduction potential for the cathode and the
oxidation potential for the anode.
E°cell = E°red (cathode) – E°red (anode) = E°red (cathode) + E°oxi
(anode)
For example, the standard electrode potential for a copper
electrode is:
Cell diagram
Pt(s) | H2 (1 atm) | H+ (1 M) || Cu2+ (1 M) | Cu(s)
E°cell = E°red (cathode) – E°red (anode)
At standard temperature, pressure and concentration
conditions, the cell's emf (measured by a multimeter) is 0.34
V. By definition, the electrode potential for the SHE is zero.
Thus, the Cu is the cathode and the SHE is the anode giving
Ecell = E°(Cu2+/Cu) – E°(H+/H2)
Or,
E°(Cu2+/Cu) = 0.34 V
Changes in the stoichiometric coefficients of a balanced cell
equation will not change E°red value because the standard
electrode potential is an intensive property
The standard potential of an electrochemical cell requires
standard conditions (ΔG°) for all of the reactants. When
reactant concentrations differ from standard conditions, the
cell potential will deviate from the standard potential. In the
20th century German chemist Walther Nernst proposed a
mathematical model to determine the effect of reactant
concentration on electrochemical cell potential.
A theory to predict whether a chemical reaction is
spontaneous based on the free energy
∆𝐆 = ∆𝐆° + 𝐑𝐓 𝐥𝐧 𝑸
Here ΔG is change in Gibbs free energy, ΔG° is the cell
potential when Q is equal to 1, T is absolute temperature
(Kelvin), R is the gas constant and Q is reaction quotient
which can be found by dividing products by reactants using
only those products and reactants that are aqueous or
gaseous.
Gibbs' key contribution was to formalize the understanding of
the effect of reactant concentration on spontaneity.
Based on Gibbs' work, Nernst extended the theory to include
the contribution from electric potential on charged species. As
shown in the previous section, the change in Gibbs free
energy for an electrochemical cell can be related to the cell
potential. Thus, Gibbs' theory becomes
𝒏𝑭∆𝑬 = 𝒏𝑭∆𝑬° − 𝑹𝑻 𝒍𝒏 𝑸
Here n is the number of electrons/mole product, F is the
Faraday ,ΔE is cell potential.
Finally, Nernst divided through by the amount of charge
transferred to arrive at a new equation which now bears his
name:
𝑹𝑻
∆𝑬 = ∆𝑬° − 𝐥𝐧 𝑸
𝒏𝑭
The spontaneous redox reactions of a conventional battery
produce electricity through the different chemical potentials of
the cathode and anode in the electrolyte. However,
electrolysis requires an external source of electrical energy to
induce a chemical reaction, and this process takes place in a
compartment called an electrolytic cell.
Electrolysis of molten sodium chloride When molten, the
salt sodium chloride can be electrolyzed to yield metallic
sodium and gaseous chlorine. Industrially this process takes
place in a special cell named Down's cell. The cell is
connected to an electrical power supply, allowing electrons to
migrate from the power supply to the electrolytic cell.
Reactions that take place at Down's cell are the following:
Anode (oxidation): 2 Cl− → Cl2(g) + 2 e−
Cathode (reduction): 2 Na+(l) + 2 e− → 2 Na(l)
Overall reaction: 2 Na+ + 2 Cl−(l) → 2 Na(l) + Cl2(g)
This process can yield large amounts of metallic sodium and
gaseous chlorine, and is widely used on mineral dressing and
metallurgy industries.
The emf for this process is approximately −4 V indicating a
(very) non-spontaneous process. In order for this reaction to
occur the power supply should provide at least a potential of
4 V. However, larger voltages must be used for this reaction
to occur at a high rate.
Electrolysis of water Water can be converted to its
component elemental gasses, H2 and O2 through the
application of an external voltage. Water doesn't decompose
into hydrogen and oxygen spontaneously as the Gibbs free
energy for the process at standard conditions is about 474.4
kJ. The decomposition of water into hydrogen and oxygen can
be performed in an electrolytic cell. In it, a pair of inert
electrodes usually made of platinum immersed in water act as
anode and cathode in the electrolytic process. The
electrolysis starts with the application of an external voltage
between the electrodes. This process will not occur except at
extremely high voltages without an electrolyte such as sodium
chloride or sulfuric acid (most used 0.1 M).
Bubbles from the gases will be seen near both electrodes. The
following half reactions describe the process mentioned
above:
Anode (oxidation): 2 H2O(l) → O2(g) + 4 H+(aq) + 4 e−
Cathode (reduction): 2 H2O(g) + 2 e− → H2(g) + 2 OH−(aq)
Overall reaction: 2 H2O(l) → 2 H2(g) + O2(g)
An electrolytic cell is an electrochemical cell that drives a
non-spontaneous redox reaction through the application of
electrical energy. They are often used to decompose
chemical compounds, in a process called electrolysis—the
Greek word lysis means to break up.
Important examples of electrolysis are the decomposition of
water into hydrogen and oxygen, and bauxite into aluminium
and other chemicals. Electroplating (e.g. of copper, silver,
nickel or chromium) is done using an electrolytic cell.
Electrolysis is a technique that uses a direct electric current
(DC).
An electrolytic cell has three component parts: an
electrolyte and two electrodes (a cathode and an anode).
The electrolyte is usually a solution of water or other
solvents in which ions are dissolved. Molten salts such as
sodium chloride are also electrolytes. When driven by an
external voltage applied to the electrodes, the ions in the
electrolyte are attracted to an electrode with the opposite
charge, where charge-transferring (also called faradaic or
redox) reactions can take place. Only with an external
electrical potential (i.e. Voltage) of correct polarity and
sufficient magnitude can an electrolytic cell decompose a
normally stable, or inert chemical compound in the solution.
The electrical energy provided can produce a chemical
reaction which would not occur spontaneously otherwise..
Any battery (actually it may have one or more than one
cell connected in series) or cell that we use as a source
of electrical energy is basically a galvanic cell where the
chemical energy of the redox reaction is converted into
electrical energy. There are mainly two types of batteries.
In the primary batteries, the reaction occurs only once and
after use over a period of time battery becomes dead and
cannot be reused again. The most familiar example of this
type is the dry cell (known as Leclanche cell after its
discoverer) which is used commonly in our transistors and
clocks. The cell consists of a zinc container that also acts
as anode and the cathode is a carbon (graphite) rod
surrounded by powdered manganese dioxide and carbon.
The space between the electrodes is filled by a moist
paste of ammonium chloride (NH4Cl) and zinc chloride
(ZnCl2).
Anode: Zn(s) → Zn2+ + 2e-
Cathode: MnO2+ NH4++ e-→ MnO(OH) + NH3
In the reaction at cathode, manganese is reduced from
the + 4 oxidation state to the +3 state. Ammonia produced
in the reaction forms a complex with Zn2+ to give [Zn
(NH3)4]2+. The cell has a potential of nearly 1.5 V. Mercury
cell suitable for low current devices like hearing aids,
watches, etc. consists of zinc – mercury amalgam as
anode and a paste of HgO and carbon as the cathode.
The electrolyte is a paste of KOH and ZnO. The electrode
reactions for the cell are given below:
Anode: Zn(Hg) + 2OH- → ZnO(s) + H2O + 2e-
Cathode: HgO + H2O + 2e- → Hg(l) + 2OH-
overall reaction:-Zn(Hg) + HgO(s) → ZnO(s) + Hg(l)
The cell potential is approximately 1.35 V and remains
constant during its life as the overall reaction does not
involve any ion in solution whose concentration can
change during its life time.
A secondary cell after use can be recharged by passing
current through it in the opposite direction so that it can
be used again. A good secondary cell can undergo a large
number of discharging and charging cycles. The most
important secondary cell is the lead storage battery
commonly used in automobiles and invertors. It consists
of a lead anode and a grid of lead packed with lead
dioxide (PbO2 ) as cathode. A 38% solution of sulphuric
acid is used as an electrolyte. The cell reactions when the
battery is in use are given below:
Anode: Pb(s) + SO42-(aq) → PbSO4(s) + 2e-
Cathode: PbO2(s) + SO42-(aq) + 4H+(aq) + 2e- → PbSO4
(s) + 2 H2O (l)
Overall reaction:-Pb(s) + PbO2(s) + 2H2SO4(aq) →
2PbSO4(s) + 2H2O(l)
On charging the battery the reaction is reversed and
PbSO4(s) on anode and cathode is converted into Pb and
PbO2.

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