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CHEM 160 General Chemistry II Lecture Presentation Electrochemistry

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Title: CHEM 160 General Chemistry II Lecture Presentation Electrochemistry


1
CHEM 160 General Chemistry IILecture
PresentationElectrochemistry
  • December 1, 2004
  • Chapter 20

2
Electrochemistry
  • Electrochemistry
  • deals with interconversion between chemical and
    electrical energy

3
Electrochemistry
  • Electrochemistry
  • deals with the interconversion between chemical
    and electrical energy
  • involves redox reactions

4
Electrochemistry
  • Electrochemistry
  • deals with interconversion between chemical and
    electrical energy
  • involves redox reactions
  • electron transfer reactions
  • Oh No! Theyre back!

5
Redox reactions (quick review)
  • Oxidation
  • Reduction
  • Reducing agent
  • Oxidizing agent

6
Redox reactions (quick review)
  • Oxidation
  • loss of electrons
  • Reduction
  • Reducing agent
  • Oxidizing agent

7
Redox reactions (quick review)
  • Oxidation
  • loss of electrons
  • Reduction
  • gain of electrons
  • Reducing agent
  • Oxidizing agent

8
Redox reactions (quick review)
  • Oxidation
  • loss of electrons
  • Reduction
  • gain of electrons
  • Reducing agent
  • donates the electrons and is oxidized
  • Oxidizing agent

9
Redox reactions (quick review)
  • Oxidation
  • loss of electrons
  • Reduction
  • gain of electrons
  • Reducing agent
  • donates the electrons and is oxidized
  • Oxidizing agent
  • accepts electrons and is reduced

10
Redox Reactions
  • Direct redox reaction

11
Redox Reactions
  • Direct redox reaction
  • Oxidizing and reducing agents are mixed together

12
Direct Redox Reaction
Zn rod
CuSO4(aq) (Cu2)
13
Direct Redox Reaction
Zn rod
CuSO4(aq) (Cu2)
Deposit of Cu metal forms
14
Redox Reactions
  • Direct redox reaction
  • Oxidizing and reducing agents are mixed together
  • Indirect redox reaction
  • Oxidizing and reducing agents are separated but
    connected electrically
  • Example
  • Zn and Cu2 can be reacted indirectly
  • Basis for electrochemistry
  • Electrochemical cell

15
Electrochemical Cells
Voltaic Cell
Zn anode
Cu cathode
Salt bridge
Cu2
Zn ? Zn2 2e-
Cu2 2e-? Cu
16
Electrochemical Cells
17
Electrochemical Cells
  • Voltaic Cell
  • cell in which a spontaneous redox reaction
    generates electricity
  • chemical energy ? electrical energy

18
Electrochemical Cells
19
Electrochemical Cells
Voltaic Cell
20
Electrochemical Cells
  • Electrolytic Cell
  • electrochemical cell in which an electric current
    drives a nonspontaneous redox reaction
  • electrical energy ? chemical energy

21
Cell Potential
22
Cell Potential
  • Cell Potential (electromotive force), Ecell (V)
  • electrical potential difference between the two
    electrodes or half-cells
  • Depends on specific half-reactions,
    concentrations, and temperature
  • Under standard state conditions (solutes 1 M,
    Psolutes 1 atm), emf standard cell potential,
    E?cell
  • 1 V 1 J/C
  • driving force of the redox reaction

23
Cell Potential
voltmeter
24
Cell Potential
low electrical potential
high electrical potential
25
Cell Potential
  • Ecell Ecathode - Eanode Eredn - Eox
  • Ecell Ecathode - Eanode Eredn - Eox
  • (Ecathode and Eanode are reduction potentials by
    definition.)

26
Cell Potential
  • Ecell Ecathode - Eanode Eredn - Eox
  • Ecell can be measured
  • Absolute Ecathode and Eanode values cannot
  • Reference electrode
  • has arbitrarily assigned E
  • used to measure relative Ecathode and Eanode for
    half-cell reactions
  • Standard hydrogen electrode (S.H.E.)
  • conventional reference electrode

27
Standard Hydrogen Electrode
  • E? 0 V (by definition arbitrarily selected)
  • 2H 2e- ? H2

28
H2 (1 atm)
Pt
1 M H
1 M Cu2
29
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30
Example 1
  • A voltaic cell is made by connecting a standard
    Cu/Cu2 electrode to a S.H.E. The cell potential
    is 0.34 V. The Cu electrode is the cathode. What
    is the standard reduction potential of the
    Cu/Cu2 electrode?

31
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32
e-
e-
H2 (1 atm)
Pt
Zn
1 M H
1 M Zn2
2H 2e- ? H2
Zn ? Zn2 2e-
33
Example 2
  • A voltaic cell is made by connecting a standard
    Zn/Zn2 electrode to a S.H.E. The cell potential
    is 0.76 V. The Zn electrode is the anode of the
    cell. What is the standard reduction potential
    of the Zn/Zn2 electrode?

34
Standard Electrode Potentials
  • Standard Reduction Potentials, E
  • Ecell measured relative to S.H.E. (0 V)
  • electrode of interest cathode
  • If E lt 0 V
  • Oxidizing agent is harder to reduce than H
  • If E gt 0 V
  • Oxidizing agent is easier to reduce than H

35
Standard Reduction Potentials
36
Uses of Standard Reduction Potentials
  • Compare strengths of reducing/oxidizing agents.
  • the more - E, stronger the red. agent
  • the more E, stronger the ox. agent

37
Standard Reduction Potentials
Ox. agent strength increases
Red. agent strength increases
38
Uses of Standard Reduction Potentials
  • Determine if oxidizing and reducing agent react
    spontaneously
  • diagonal rule

ox. agent
spontaneous
red. agent
39
Uses of Standard Reduction Potentials
  • Determine if oxidizing and reducing agent react
    spontaneously

more
Spontaneous rxn if Ecathode gt Eanode
Cathode (reduction)
Eredn (cathode)
Eredn (V)
Anode (oxidation)
Eredn (anode)
more -
40
Standard Reduction Potentials
41
Uses of Standard Reduction Potentials
  • Calculate Ecell
  • Ecell Ecathode - Eanode
  • Greater Ecell, greater the driving force
  • Ecell gt 0 spontaneous redox reactions
  • Ecell lt 0 nonspontaeous redox reactions

42
Example 3
  • A voltaic cell consists of a Ag electrode in 1.0
    M AgNO3 and a Cu electrode in 1 M Cu(NO3)2.
    Calculate Ecell for the spontaneous cell
    reaction at 25C.

43
Standard Reduction Potentials
44
Example 4
  • A voltaic cell consists of a Ni electrode in 1.0
    M Ni(NO3)2 and an Fe electrode in 1 M Fe(NO3)2.
    Calculate Ecell for the spontaneous cell
    reaction at 25C.

45
Standard Reduction Potentials
46
Cell Potential
  • Is there a relationship between Ecell and DG for
    a redox reaction?

47
Cell Potential
  • Relationship between Ecell and DG
  • DG -nFEcell
  • F Faraday constant 96500 C/mol e-s, n
    e-s transferred redox rxn.

48
Cell Potential
  • Relationship between Ecell and DG
  • DG -nFEcell
  • F Faraday constant 96500 C/mol e-s, n
    e-s transferred redox rxn.
  • 1 J CV
  • ?G lt 0, Ecell gt 0 spontaneous

49
Equilibrium Constants from Ecell
  • Relationship between Ecell and DG
  • DG -nFEcell
  • F Faraday constant 96500 C/mol e-s, n
    e-s transferred redox rxn
  • 1 J CV
  • ?G lt 0, Ecell gt 0 spontaneous
  • Under standard state conditions
  • DG -nFEcell

50
Example 5
  • Calculate DG at room temperature for the
    reaction between Sn4(aq) and Fe(s).

51
Standard Reduction Potentials
Ox. agent strength increases
Red. agent strength increases
52
Equilibrium Constants from Ecell
  • Relationship between Ecell and DG
  • DG -nFEcell
  • F Faraday constant 96500 C/mol e-s, n
    e-s transferred redox rxn
  • 1 J CV
  • ?G lt 0, Ecell gt 0 spontaneous
  • Under standard state conditions
  • DG -nFEcell

53
Equilibrium Constants from Ecell
  • Relationship between Ecell and DG
  • DG -nFEcell
  • F Faraday constant 96500 C/mol e-s, n
    e-s transferred redox rxn
  • 1 J CV
  • ?G lt 0, Ecell gt 0 spontaneous
  • Under standard state conditions
  • DG -nFEcell
  • and
  • DG -RTlnK
  • so
  • -nFEcell -RTlnK

54
Calorimetric Data
DH
DS
Electrochemical Data
Composition Data
DG
Ecell
Equilibrium constants
K
55
Example 5
  • Calculate Ecell, DG, and K for the voltaic cell
    that uses the reaction between Ag and Cl2 under
    standard state conditions at 25C.

56
Standard Reduction Potentials
Ox. agent strength increases
Red. agent strength increases
57
The Nernst Equation
  • DG depends on concentrations
  • DG DG RTlnQ
  • and
  • DG -nFEcell and DG -nFEcell
  • thus
  • -nFEcell -nFEcell RTlnQ
  • or
  • Ecell Ecell - (RT/nF)lnQ (Nernst eqn.)

58
The Nernst Equation
  • Ecell Ecell - (RT/nF)lnQ (Nernst eqn.)
  • At 298 K (25C), RT/F 0.0257 V
  • so
  • Ecell Ecell - (0.0257/n)lnQ
  • or
  • Ecell Ecell - (0.0592/n)logQ

59
Example 7
  • Calculate the voltage produced by the voltaic
    cell using the reaction between Zn(s) and
    Cu2(aq) if Zn2 0.001 M and Cu2 1.3 M.
  • Zn(s) Cu2(aq) ? Zn2(aq) Cu(s)

60
Example 7
  • Calculate the voltage produced by the galvanic
    cell which uses the reaction below if Ag
    0.001 M and Cu2 1.3 M.
  • 2Ag(aq) Cu(s) ? 2Ag(s) Cu2(aq)

61
Standard Reduction Potentials
Ox. agent strength increases
Red. agent strength increases
62
Commercial Voltaic Cells
  • Battery
  • commercial voltaic cell used as portable source
    of electrical energy
  • types
  • primary cell
  • Nonrechargeable
  • Example Alkaline battery
  • secondary cell
  • Rechargeable
  • Example Lead storage battery

63
How Does a Battery Work
Assume a generalized battery
64
Battery
Placing the battery into a flashlight, etc., and
turning the power on completes the circuit and
allows electron flow to occur
Electrolyte paste ion migration occurs here
e- flow
cathode () Reduction occurs here
anode (-) oxidation occurs here
65
How Does a Battery Work
  • Battery reaction when producing electricity
    (spontaneous)
  • Cathode O1 e- ? R1
  • Anode R2 ? O2 e-
  • Overall O1 R2 ? R1 O2
  • Recharging a secondary cell
  • Redox reaction must be reversed, i.e., current is
    reversed (nonspontaneous)
  • Recharge O2 R1 ? R2 O1
  • Performed using electrical energy from an
    external power source

66
Batteries
  • Read the textbook to fill in the details on
    specific batteries.
  • Alkaline battery
  • Lead storage battery
  • Nicad battery
  • Fuel cell

67
Alkaline Dry Cell
68
Alkaline Dry Cell
Plated steel ()
Cathode Mixture of MnO2 and C (graphite)
Brass rod
Anode Mixture of Zn and KOH(aq)
Paper or fabric Separator
Insulators
Plated steel (-)
69
Alkaline Dry Cell
  • Half-reactions

70
Alkaline Dry Cell
  • Half-reactions
  • anode Zn(s) 2OH-(aq) --gt ZnO(s) H2O(l) 2e-

71
Alkaline Dry Cell
  • Half-reactions
  • anode Zn(s) 2OH-(aq) --gt ZnO(s) H2O(l)
    2e-
  • cathode 2MnO2(s) H2O(l) 2e- --gt
    Mn2O3(s) 2OH-(aq)

72
Alkaline Dry Cell
  • Half-reactions
  • anode Zn(s) 2OH-(aq) --gt ZnO(s) H2O(l)
    2e-
  • cathode 2MnO2(s) H2O(l) 2e- --gt
    Mn2O3(s) 2OH-(aq)
  • overall Zn(s) 2MnO2(s) --gt Mn2O3(s) ZnO(s)
  • Ecell 1.54 V

73
Lead Storage Battery
(anode)
(cathode)
6 x 2V 12 V
74
Lead Storage Battery
  • Half-reactions

75
Lead Storage Battery
  • Half-reactions
  • anode Pb(s) SO42-(aq) --gt PbSO4(s) 2e-

76
Lead Storage Battery
  • Half-reactions
  • anode Pb(s) SO42-(aq) --gt PbSO4(s) 2e-
  • cathode PbO2(s) 4H(aq) SO42-(aq) 2e- --gt
    PbSO4(s) 2H2O(l)

77
Lead Storage Battery
  • Half-reactions
  • anode Pb(s) SO42-(aq) --gt PbSO4(s) 2e-
  • cathode PbO2(s) 4H(aq) SO42-(aq) 2e- --gt
    PbSO4(s) 2H2O(l)
  • overall Pb(s) PbO2(s) 2H2SO4(aq) --gt
    2PbSO4(s) 2H2O(l)

78
Lead Storage Battery
  • Half-reactions
  • anode Pb(s) SO42-(aq) --gt PbSO4(s) 2e-
  • cathode PbO2(s) 4H(aq) SO42-(aq) 2e- --gt
    PbSO4(s) 2H2O(l)
  • overall Pb(s) PbO2(s) 2H2SO4(aq) --gt
    2PbSO4(s) 2H2O(l)
  • Cell reaction reversed during recharging.
  • 2PbSO4(s) 2H2O(l) --gt Pb(s) PbO2(s)
    2H2SO4(aq)

79
Lead Storage Battery
  • Half-reactions
  • anode Pb(s) HSO42-(aq) --gt PbSO4(s) H
    2e-
  • cathode PbO2(s) 3H(aq) HSO42-(aq) 2e-
    --gt PbSO4(s) 2H2O(l)
  • overall Pb(s) PbO2(s) 2H 2HSO4-(aq) --gt
    2PbSO4(s) 2H2O(l)
  • Cell reaction reversed during recharging.

80
Lead Storage Battery
  • Half-reactions during recharging (nonspontaneous)
  • cathode PbSO4(s) H 2e- --gt Pb(s)
    HSO42-(aq)
  • anode PbSO4(s) 2H2O(l) --gt
  • PbO2(s) 3H(aq) HSO42-(aq) 2e-
  • overall 2PbSO4(s) 2H2O(l) --gt
  • PbO2(s) Pb(s) 2H 2HSO4-(aq)
  • Cell converted into electrolytic cell via
    application of external electrical energy.

81
Fuel Cells
  • Voltaic-like cell that operates with continuous
    supply of energetic reactants (fuel) to the
    electrodes
  • utilize combustion reactions
  • do not store chemical energy
  • Not self-contained since reactants must be
    supplied to the electrodes
  • Example Hydrogen-Oxygen fuel cell

82
Hydrogen-Oxygen Fuel Cell
83
Hydrogen-Oxygen Fuel Cell
  • Half-reactions

84
Hydrogen-Oxygen Fuel Cell
  • Half-reactions
  • anode 2H2(g) 4OH-(aq) --gt 4H2O(l) 4e-

85
Hydrogen-Oxygen Fuel Cell
  • Half-reactions
  • anode 2H2(g) 4OH-(aq) --gt 4H2O(l) 4e-
  • cathode O2(g) 2H2O(l) 4e- --gt 4OH-(aq)

86
Hydrogen-Oxygen Fuel Cell
  • Half-reactions
  • anode 2H2(g) 4OH-(aq) --gt 4H2O(l) 4e-
  • cathode O2(g) 2H2O(l) 4e- --gt 4OH-(aq)
  • overall 2H2(g) O2(g) --gt 2H2O(l)

87
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88
Corrosion
  • Corrosion
  • deterioration of metals by a spontaneous redox
    reaction
  • Attacked by species in environment
  • Metal becomes a voltaic cell
  • Metal is often lost to a solution as an ion
  • Rusting of Iron

89
Corrosion of Iron
90
Corrosion of Iron
  • Half-reactions
  • anode Fe(s) ? Fe2(aq) 2e-
  • cathode O2(g) 4H(aq) 4e- ? 2H2O(l)
  • overall 2Fe(s) O2(g) 4H(aq) ?
    2Fe2(aq) 2H2O(l)
  • Ecell gt 0 (Ecell 0.8 to 1.2 V), so process is
    spontaneous!

91
Corrosion of Iron
  • Rust formation
  • 4Fe2(aq) O2(g) 4H(aq) ? 4Fe3(aq)
    2H2O(l)
  • 2Fe3(aq) 4H2O(l) ? Fe2O3H2O(s) 6H(aq)

92
Prevention of Corrosion
  • Cover the Fe surface with a protective coating
  • Paint
  • Passivation
  • surface atoms made inactive via oxidation
  • 2Fe(s) 2Na2CrO4(aq) 2H2O(l) --gt
    Fe2O3(s) Cr2O3(s) 4NaOH(aq)
  • Other metal
  • Tin
  • Zn
  • Galvanized iron

93
Prevention of Corrosion
  • Cathodic Protection
  • metal to be protected is brought into contact
    with a more easily oxidized metal
  • sacrificial metal becomes the anode
  • Corrodes preferentially over the iron
  • Iron serves only as the cathode

94
Standard Electrode Potentials
  • Half-reaction E
  • F2(g) 2e- -gt 2F-(aq) 2.87 V
  • Ag(aq) e- -gt Ag(s) 0.80 V
  • Cu2(aq) 2e- -gt Cu(s) 0.34 V
  • 2H(aq) 2e- -gt H2(g) 0 V
  • Ni2(aq) 2e- -gt Ni(s) -0.25 V
  • Fe2(aq) 2e- -gt Fe(s) -0.44 V
  • Zn2(aq) 2e- -gt Zn(s) -0.76 V
  • Al3(aq) 3e- -gt Al(s) -1.66 V
  • Mg2(aq) 2e- -gtMg(s) -2.38 V

Metals more easily oxidized than Fe have more
negative Es
95
Cathodic Protection
galvanized steel (Fe)
96
Cathodic Protection
(anode)
(cathode)
(electrolyte)
97
Electrolysis
  • Electrolysis
  • process in which electrical energy drives a
    nonspontaneous redox reaction
  • electrical energy is converted into chemical
    energy
  • Electrolytic cell
  • electrochemical cell in which an electric current
    drives a nonspontaneous redox reaction

98
Electrolysis
  • Same principles apply to both electrolytic and
    voltaic cells
  • oxidation occurs at the anode
  • reduction occurs at the cathode
  • electrons flow from anode to cathode in the
    external circuit
  • In an electrolytic cell, an external power source
    pumps the electrons through the external circuit

99
Electrolysis of Molten NaCl
100
Quantitative Aspects of Electrochemical Cells
  • For any half-reaction, the amount of a substance
    oxidized or reduced at an electrode is
    proportional to the number of electrons passed
    through the cell
  • Faradays law of electrolysis
  • Examples
  • Na 1e- ? Na
  • Al3 3e- ? Al
  • Number of electrons passing through cell is
    measured by determining the quantity of charge
    (coulombs) that has passed
  • 1 C 1 A x 1 s
  • 1 F 1 mole e- 96500 C

101
Steps for Quantitative Electrolysis Calculations
charge in coulombs (C)
Number of moles of e-
moles of substance oxidized or reduced
mass of substance oxidized or reduced
102
Example 8
  • What mass of copper metal can be produced by a
    3.00 A current flowing through a copper(II)
    sulfate (CuSO4) solution for 5.00 hours?

103
Example 9
  • An aqueous solution of an iron salt is
    electrolyzed by passing a current of 2.50 A for
    3.50 hours. As a result, 6.1 g of iron metal are
    formed at the cathode. Calculate the charge on
    the iron ions in the solution.
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