RP8: Measuring EMF of an electrochemical cell Flashcards
What is an electrochemical cell?
Two different half-cells are connected by a salt bridge, with their electrodes connected to a voltmeter (measures EMF/cell potential). This allows the flow of electrons.
The electrical energy generated is from chemical redox reactions.
What does a half-cell consist of?
Half-cells are usually metal/metal ion (metal electrode in the metal ion solution) or ion/ion (ions that are the same element but with different oxidation states, in solution).
Each half-cell will contain the chemical species from one half of a redox reaction (redox half equation).
What is a salt bridge?
Salt bridge allows the transfer of ions.
Why may a graphite or platinum electrode be used?
They are very unreactive.
How do you measure comparative electrode potentials of different metals?
- File a piece of copper using emery paper and connect it to the positive voltmeter terminal
- Cut a piece of filter paper, saturate with KNO3 solution and place on top of the copper
- Connect the voltmeter to another piece of metal
- Hold the metal against the filter paper