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Chemistry
4. Chemical Changes
Electrolysis of Aqueous Solutions
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Electrolysis
of aqueous solution
Reactions that take place, products at electrodes, half-equations for cathode and anode reactions
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Electrolysis
of molten compounds
Only need to consider two ions (positive and
negative
)
Positive ions move to
cathode
,
gain
electrons to form atoms
Negative
ions move to anode,
lose
electrons to form atoms
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Electrolysis
of aqueous solutions
Need to consider
water
molecules and their ions (
H+
and OH-)
Positive ions (e.g.
Cu2+
) and
H+
attracted to cathode
Oxygen
gas produced at
anode
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Electrolysis of copper sulfate solution
1.
Copper
ions (Cu2+) and
hydrogen
ions (H+) attracted to cathode
2. Copper ions
reduced
at cathode to form copper atoms
3.
Oxygen gas
produced at anode
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Inert
electrodes
Electrodes that do not react with the chemicals being produced, e.g.
platinum
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Half
-equation at cathode
Cu2+ + 2e- → Cu (
reduction
)
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Electrolysis of aqueous solutions covered in
two videos
, this one and the next one
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Aqueous
Dissolved
in water
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Water
molecules splitting
1. Produce hydrogen ion H+
2. Produce
hydroxide
ion OH-
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Sodium
chloride
Has sodium ion
Na+
and chloride ion
Cl-
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Electrolysis
of sodium chloride solution
1. Ions attracted to cathode:
sodium ion Na
+ and
hydrogen ion H
+
2. Ions attracted to anode:
chloride ion Cl-
and
hydroxide ion OH-
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Hydrogen
is produced at the cathode if the metal is more
reactive
than hydrogen
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Sodium is more
reactive
than hydrogen
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Chlorine
gas is produced at the
anode
if the aqueous solution contains halide ions such as chloride
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Reaction
at cathode
1. Hydrogen ion
H+
gains 1 electron to form hydrogen atom
2.
Hydrogen
atoms pair to form hydrogen molecule
H2
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Reaction at anode
1. Chloride ion Cl-
loses 1 electron
to form
chlorine
atom
2.
Chlorine
atoms pair to form
chlorine
molecule Cl2
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Half
equations can be written to show the reactions at the
cathode
and anode
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