EC2526 — Electrochemistry Tutorial

Source: EC2526 MY V3 - STDN Copy.pdf (inbox)
Note: This is a student handout with heavy image/slide content. Extractable text is limited; the summary below captures the key concepts present in the document.

Overview

Tutorial covering galvanic (voltaic) cells, cell notation, half-equations, oxidizing and reducing agents, and electromotive force (EMF).


Redox Reactions & Half-Equations

Example Reactions

i. Zinc–Cadmium $$\ce{Zn(s) + Cd^{2+}(aq) -> Zn^{2+}(aq) + Cd(s)}$$

  • Anode (oxidation): $\ce{Zn(s) -> Zn^{2+}(aq) + 2e^-}$
  • Cathode (reduction): $\ce{Cd^{2+}(aq) + 2e^- -> Cd(s)}$

ii. Magnesium–Scandium $$\ce{3Mg(s) + 2Sc^{3+}(aq) -> 3Mg^{2+}(aq) + 2Sc(s)}$$

  • Anode: $\ce{3Mg(s) -> 3Mg^{2+}(aq) + 6e^-}$
  • Cathode: $\ce{2Sc^{3+}(aq) + 6e^- -> 2Sc(s)}$

iii. Iron–Permanganate $$\ce{5Fe^{2+}(aq) + MnO4^-(aq) + 8H+(aq) -> 5Fe^{3+}(aq) + Mn^{2+}(aq) + 4H2O(l)}$$

  • Anode: $\ce{5Fe^{2+}(aq) -> 5Fe^{3+}(aq) + 5e^-}$
  • Cathode: $\ce{MnO4^-(aq) + 8H+(aq) + 5e^- -> Mn^{2+}(aq) + 4H2O(l)}$

Cell Notation

Cell notation follows the convention:

$$\text{Anode } | \text{ Anode ion } || \text{ Cathode ion } | \text{ Cathode }$$

Examples

Cell Notation
a $\ce{Cr(s)
b $\ce{Pt(s)
c $\ce{Sc(s)

Note: Platinum ($\ce{Pt}$) is used as an inert electrode when no solid metal is involved in the half-reaction.


Identifying Oxidizing & Reducing Agents

Oxidizing Agent Reducing Agent
Description Species that undergoes reduction Species that undergoes oxidation
Electron transfer Gains electrons Loses electrons
Oxidation number Decreases Increases

From Cell Examples

Cell Oxidizing Agent Reducing Agent
a ($\ce{Cr Pb}$)
b ($\ce{Br2 Cl2}$)
c ($\ce{Sc H2}$)

Electromotive Force (EMF)

Galvanic Cell Basics

  • Two electrodes connected by a wire and voltmeter.
  • Anode: Site of oxidation; electrons leave → labeled negative terminal.
  • Cathode: Site of reduction; electrons arrive → labeled positive terminal.
  • Electrons always travel from anode to cathode.
  • Current flows from cathode to anode (opposite to electron flow).

Spontaneity

  • Positive EMF values → spontaneous redox reaction.
  • Negative $\Delta G$ → releases energy to the environment.

Salt Bridge Function

  • Donates anions and cations to each side to neutralize building charge.
  • Without it, charge buildup would stop the reaction.
    • Anode solution becomes more positive as metal ions dissolve.
    • Cathode solution becomes more negative as metal ions deposit.

Relative Strength of Agents

Oxidizing Agents Reducing Agents
Strength trend More positive $E^\circ$ value → stronger More negative $E^\circ$ value → stronger
Electrode assignment Cathode = more positive $E^\circ$ Anode = more negative $E^\circ$

Related Concepts

  • Electrochemistry — General electrochemistry concepts
  • FAD1018 - Basic Chemistry II — Course page

Related Lectures