Chapter 17 - Electrochemistry & Its Applications
Chapter 17 - Electrochemistry & Its Applications
Moore
Conrad L. Stanitski
http://academic.cengage.com/chemistry/moore
Chapter 17
Electrochemistry & Its Applications
Atom Ox Exceptions
F -1 none
Group 1A +1 very rare
Group 2A +2 very rare
H +1 rare; metal hydrides MH
O -2 rare; metal peroxides MO2
Cl -1
Br -1 interhalogens; halogen oxides
I -1
Redox Reaction Review
Oxidation & reduction always occur together.
+2 e-
H+ is reduced, Mg is oxidized.
Redox Reactions
Determine the oxidation numbers for each element and the
oxidizing and reducing agents in:
6 Fe2+ + Cr2O72- + 14 H3O+ → 6 Fe3+ + 2 Cr3+ + 21 H2O
Species Ox Explanation
Fe2+ +2 charge on ion
Cr2O72- O = -2 O is usually -2
Cr = +6 2(Cr) + 7(-2) = -2
H3O+ O = -2; H = +1 O is usually -2; H is usually +1
Fe3+ +3 charge on ion
Cr3+ -2 charge on ion
H2O O = -2; H = +1 O is usually -2; H is usually +1
Fe2+ → Fe3+ oxidation Fe2+ = reducing agent
Cr(+6) → Cr3+ reduction Cr2O72- = oxidizing agent
Half-Reactions & Redox Reactions
Redox reactions can be split into half reactions:
Al(s) Al3+(aq) + 3 e-
Zn2+(aq) + 2 e- Zn(s)
2[ Al(s) Al3+(aq) + 3 e- ]
3[ Zn2+(aq) + 2 e- Zn(s) ]
2 Al(s) + 3 Zn2+(aq) 2 Al3+(aq) + 3 Zn(s)
Voltaic Cells
A voltaic cell is an electrochemical cell in which a
chemical reaction and electricity interact.
Cu salt bridge Fe
Also called a battery.
(A battery is strictly a series of
linked voltaic cells)
Cu2+ Fe2+
NO3- NO3-
Voltaic Cells
Cu2+(aq) + Zn(s) → Cu(s) + Zn2+(aq)
Voltaic Cells
Cu2+(aq) + Zn(s) → Cu(s) + Zn2+(aq)
Anode Cathode
Salt Bridge
Contains a salt paste (e.g. K2SO4 ).
• A porous plug restricts bulk flow
• Ions pass into/out of the cells
• Stops charge buildup.
porous
plug Cu
Zn
SO4 2- SO4 2-
Zn2+ K2SO4 K+
Zn2+ Cu2+
phase salt
boundary bridge
Balance e-:
Cathode: 3[Sn2+(aq) + 2 e- → Sn(s)]
Anode: 2[Al(s) → Al3+(aq) + 3 e-]
3 Sn2+(aq) + 2 Al(s) → 3 Sn(s) + 2 Al3+(aq)
Identify:
a) the strongest oxidizing agent.
b) the weakest oxidizing agent.
c) the strongest reducing agent.
d) the weakest reducing agent.
Cell Potentials
Consider the following table:
Half Reaction Half Cell E° (V)
Au3+(aq) + 3 e- → Au(s) Au3+(aq)|Au(s) +1.52
Cl2(g) + 2 e- → 2 Cl-(aq) Cl2(g)|Cl−(aq)|Pt +1.358
Al3+(aq) + 3 e- → Al(s) Al3+(aq)|Al(s) -1.676
K+(aq) + e- → K(s) K+(aq)|K(s) -2.925
Identify:
a) the strongest oxidizing agent. = Au3+(aq)
b) the weakest oxidizing agent. = K+(aq)
c) the strongest reducing agent. = K(s)
d) the weakest reducing agent. = Au(s)
Cell Potentials
Consider the following table:
Half Reaction Half Cell E° (V)
Au3+(aq) + 3 e- → Au(s) Au3+(aq)|Au(s) +1.52
Cl2(g) + 2 e- → 2 Cl-(aq) Cl2(g)|Cl−(aq)|Pt +1.358
Al3+(aq) + 3 e- → Al(s) Al3+(aq)|Al(s) -1.676
K+(aq) + e- → K(s) K+(aq)|K(s) -2.925
Will:
a) Cl2(g) oxidize Au(s) to Au3+(aq)?
b) K(s) reduce Cl2(g) to Cl-(aq)?
and
c) What can be reduced by Al(s)?
Cell Potentials
Consider the following table:
Half Reaction Half Cell E° (V)
Au3+(aq) + 3 e- → Au(s) Au3+(aq)|Au(s) +1.52
Cl2(g) + 2 e- → 2 Cl-(aq) Cl2(g)|Cl−(aq)|Pt +1.358
Al3+(aq) + 3 e- → Al(s) Al3+(aq)|Al(s) -1.676
K+(aq) + e- → K(s) K+(aq)|K(s) -2.925
Will:
a) Cl2(g) oxidize Au(s) to Au3+(aq)? = No
b) K(s) reduce Cl2(g) to Cl-(aq)? = Yes
and
c) What can be reduced by Al(s)? = Cl2 and Au3+
E°, Gibbs Free Energy and K°
Product-favored: ΔG° < 0
Spontaneous cell reactions: E°cell > 0.
ΔG° = –n F E°cell
Michael Faraday
with n = number of e- transferred,
F = Faraday constant = charge/(mol of e-).
= (e- charge) x (Avogadro’s number)
= (1.60 x 10-19 C)(6.02 x 1023 mol-1)
F = 96,485 C/mol
E°and ΔG°
What is the standard cell potential and Gibbs free
energy when aluminum and iron(II) ions react to form
iron and aluminum ions?
Half reactions:
Cathode: 3[Fe2+(aq) + 2 e- → Fe(s)]
Anode: 2[Al(s) → Al3+(aq) + 3 e-]
ΔG° = − nFE°cell
n = 6 (2 [Al3+ + 3 e- → Al] …)
ΔG°
K° E°
cell
E°cell = R T ln K°
nF
ΔG°, E°and K°
Determine K° for the following reaction at 25 C:
2 Ag(s) + Hg2+(aq) → 2 Ag+(aq) + Hg(ℓ)
Half Reaction Half Cell E° (V)
Hg2+(aq) + 2 e- → Hg(ℓ) Hg2+(aq)|Hg(ℓ) +0.8535
Ag+(aq) + e- → Ag(s) Ag+(aq)|Ag(s) +0.7991
E°cell = 0.8535 V – 0.7991 V = 0.0544 V
RT
E°cell = ln K° ; thus ln K° = E°cell n F
nF RT
(2)(96,485 C mol-1)
ln K° = 0.0544 V
(8.314 J K-1 mol-1 )(298 K)
RT
Ecell = E°cell − lnQ (Nernst equation)
nF
Concentration & Cell Potential
What is the voltage for: Cu2+ + Zn(s) → Cu(s) + Zn2+
at 298 K if [Cu2+] = 0.10 M and [Zn2+] = 5.0 M?
E°cell = 1.10 V.
RT RT [Zn 2+]
Ecell = E°cell − lnQ = E°cell − ln
nF nF [Cu2+]
Ecell = 1.05 V
Concentration Cells
Identical cells? E may not be zero…
Example Zn|Zn2+(aq,0.01M)||Zn2+(aq,1M)|Zn
Left-to-right…
Zn(s) → Zn2+ (0.01M) + 2 e-
Zn2+ (1M) + 2 e- → Zn(s)
Zn2+(1M) → Zn2+(0.01M) (net reaction)
Net E° = +2.041 V
insoluble
E° = -2.925 V
2 H2O(ℓ) + 2 e- → H2(g) + 2 OH-(aq) E° = -0.828 V
2 I-(aq) → I2(aq) + 2 e-
oxidations
E° = 0.535 V
2 H2O(ℓ) → O2(g) + 4 H+(aq) + 4 e- E° = 1.229 V
Charge (C)
use Faraday’s constant
Moles of e-
use stoichiometry
Moles of substance
oxidized or reduced
Mass of substance
oxidized or reduced
Counting Electrons
What mass of gold will be electroplated from aqueous
gold(III) chloride in 5.0 min by a 10.0 A current?
Au3+(aq) + 3 e- → Au(s)
60 s
Charge = (10.0 A)(5.0 min) = 3.0 x 103 C
1 min
Al3+ + 3 e- → Al
Aluminum corrodes
• Forms Al2O3 (insoluble)
• Hard, thin layer.
• Protects Al from further corrosion.
Corrosion
Anode: 2[Fe(s) Fe2+ + 2 e-]
Cathode: O2(g) + 2 H2O(ℓ) + 4 e- 4 OH-(aq)
2 Fe(s) + O2(g) + 2 H2O(ℓ) 2 Fe(OH)2(s)