Voltaic/Galvanic Cells. Voltaic Cells In spontaneous oxidation-reduction (redox) reactions, electrons are transferred and energy is released.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Electrochemical & Voltaic Cells
Advertisements

Unit 11- Redox and Electrochemistry
Cells and Potentials. Voltaic Cells In spontaneous oxidation- reduction (redox) reactions, electrons are transferred and energy is released. © 2009, Prentice-Hall,
Electrochemical Cells
Cells and Voltage.
Cells and Voltage.
Galvanic Cells What will happen if a piece of Zn metal is immersed in a CuSO 4 solution? A spontaneous redox reaction occurs: Zn (s) + Cu 2 + (aq) Zn 2.
Regents Warm-Up Given the balanced equation representing a reaction: Cl 2 (g) →  Cl(g) + Cl(g) What occurs during this change? (1) Energy is absorbed.
Prentice Hall © 2003Chapter 20 Zn added to HCl yields the spontaneous reaction Zn(s) + 2H + (aq)  Zn 2+ (aq) + H 2 (g). The oxidation number of Zn has.
Electrochemistry Use of spontaneous chemical reactions to produce electricity; use of electricity to drive non-spontaneous reactions. Zn(s) + Cu 2+ (aq)
Chapter 20 Electrochemistry
Voltaic Cells Chapter 20.
1 Electrochemical Cells: The Voltaic Cell Mr. ShieldsRegents Chemistry U14 L03.
Chemistry 1011 Slot 51 Chemistry 1011 TOPIC Electrochemistry TEXT REFERENCE Masterton and Hurley Chapter 18.
Electrochemical Reactions
Chapter 21: Electrochemistry I Chemical Change and Electrical Work 21.1 Half-Reactions and Electrochemical Cells 21.2 Voltaic Cells: Using Spontaneous.
Redox Half Reactions What is the purpose of creating a half reaction? How to balance a half reaction?
Electrochemistry Chapter 19. 2Mg (s) + O 2 (g) 2MgO (s) 2Mg 2Mg e - O 2 + 4e - 2O 2- Oxidation half-reaction (lose e - ) Reduction half-reaction.
Electrochemistry Chapter 20 Electrochemistry. Electrochemistry Electrochemical Reactions In electrochemical reactions, electrons are transferred from.
Electrochemistry Chapter 20 Electrochemistry. Electrochemistry Electrochemical Reactions In electrochemical reactions, _________________ are transferred.
Section 10.3—Batteries & Redox Reactions
Updates Assignment 07 is due Fri., March 30 (in class) Prepare well for the final exam; a good score can compensate for low midterm marks!
Chapter 20 Electrochemistry Lecture Presentation © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.
Electrochemical Cells - producing an electric current with a redox reaction.
Redox Reactions and Electrochemistry Chapter 19. Voltaic Cells In spontaneous oxidation-reduction (redox) reactions, electrons are transferred and energy.
Electrochemical CellElectrochemical Cell  Electrochemical device with 2 half-cells connecting electrodes and solutions  Electrode —metal strip in electrochemical.
Mr. Chapman Chemistry 30 ELECTROCHEMICAL CELLS AND REDOX REACTIONS.
Electrochemical cell. Parts of a Voltaic Cell The electrochemical cell is actually composed to two half cells. Each half cell consists of one conducting.
Chapter 20 Electrochemistry. Electrochemical Reactions In electrochemical reactions, electrons are transferred from one species to another.
Chapter 20 Electrochemistry. © 2009, Prentice-Hall, Inc. Oxidation Numbers In order to keep track of what loses electrons and what gains them, we assign.
Electrochemistry Ch.19 & 20 Using chemical reactions to produce electricity.
Voltaic Cells/Galvanic Cells and Batteries. Background Information Electricity is the movement of electrons, and batteries are an important source of.
Electrochemistry Combining the Half-Reactions 5 C 2 O 4 2−  10 CO e − 10 e − + 16 H MnO 4 −  2 Mn H 2 O When we add these together,
Electrochemistry Chapter 18 Electrochemistry. Electrochemistry Electrochemical Reactions In electrochemical reactions, electrons are transferred from.
Electrochemistry © 2009, Prentice-Hall, Inc. Electrochemical Reactions In electrochemical reactions, electrons are transferred from one species to another.
Electrochemistry Cells and Batteries.
Electrochemistry. Electrochemistry is the study of the relationship between the flow of electric current and chemical changes, including the conversion.
Galvanic Cells Electrochem part II. Voltaic Cells In spontaneous oxidation- reduction (redox) reactions, electrons are transferred and energy is released.
Electrochemistry. What is “electrochemistry”? The area of chemistry concerned with the interconversion of chemical and electrical energy. Energy released.
Electrochemistry Ch. 18 Electrochemistry 18.1 Voltaic Cells.
1 © 2006 Brooks/Cole - Thomson OXIDATION-REDUCTION REACTIONS Indirect Redox Reaction A battery functions by transferring electrons through an external.
Electrochemistry Introduction Voltaic Cells. Electrochemical Cell  Electrochemical device with 2 half-cells with electrodes and solutions  Electrode—metal.
Electrochemistry Sam Pomichter Introduction Oxidation- the loss of electrons Reduction- the gain of electrons We can identify oxidation-reduction.
Balancing Redox Equations – Voltaic (Galvanic) Cells.
Chapter 18 Electrochemistry Lesson 1. Electrochemistry 18.1Balancing Oxidation–Reduction Reactions 18.2 Galvanic Cells 18.3 Standard Reduction Potentials.
Chapter 20: Electrochemistry. © 2009, Prentice-Hall, Inc. Electrochemical Reactions In electrochemical reactions, electrons are transferred from one species.
9.2 Electrochemical Cells
Chapter 21 Electrochemistry. Voltaic Cells  Electrochemical cells used to convert chemical energy into electrical energy  Produced by spontaneous redox.
mr4iE. batteries containers of chemicals waiting to be converted to electricity the chemical reaction does not.
Electrochemical CellElectrochemical Cell  Electrochemical device with 2 half-cells connecting electrodes and solutions  Electrode —metal strip in electrochemical.
Zn (s) + Cu2+ (aq)  Zn2+ (aq) + Cu (s)
You will have to completely label a diagram to look like this
Chapter 10.7 Electrolysis.
Chapter 20 Electrochemistry
Chapter 20 Electrochemistry
10.2 Electrochemistry Objectives S2
Electrochemistry- Balancing Redox Equations
You will have to completely label a diagram to look like this
Electrochemistry Lesson 3
AP Chem Get HW checked Work on oxidation # review
Voltaic (Galvanic)Cells
AP Chem Get HW checked Take out laptops and go to bit.ly/GalCell
Zn (s) + Cu2+ (aq)  Zn2+ (aq) + Cu (s)
Presentation transcript:

Voltaic/Galvanic Cells

Voltaic Cells In spontaneous oxidation-reduction (redox) reactions, electrons are transferred and energy is released.

Voltaic Cells We can use that energy to do work if we make the electrons flow through an external device. We call such a setup a voltaic cell.

Voltaic Cells p. 836 A typical cell looks like this. The oxidation occurs at the anode. The reduction occurs at the cathode.

Voltaic Cells Once even one electron flows from the anode to the cathode, the charges in each beaker would not be balanced and the flow of electrons would stop. OH NO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Therefore, we use a salt bridge, usually a U- shaped tube that contains a salt solution, to keep the charges balanced. –Cations move toward the cathode. –Anions move toward the anode.

Let’s label a little! Consider the following eqn: Zn +2 (aq) + Cu (s) ↔ Cu 2+ (aq) + Zn (s) Label the following: – Anode – Cathode – Direction of electron flow

Voltaic Cells In the cell, electrons leave the anode and flow through the wire to the cathode. As the electrons leave the anode, the cations formed (LEFT BEHIND) dissolve into the solution in the anode compartment.

Voltaic Cells As the electrons reach the cathode, EXISTING cations in the cathode are attracted to the now extra negative cathode. The electrons are taken by the cation, and the neutral metal is deposited on the cathode. Watch This

Let’s make a mini-voltaic cell. Get a Demonstration of a Voltaic Cell Sheet. Go Online to link.

Voltaic Cell Diagram Representation of the overall reaction in the electrochemical cell. The chemicals involved are what are actually reacting during the reduction and oxidation reactions. Makes it easier to see what is being oxidized and what is being reduced, focus is on reactions that create the cell potential.

Cell Diagrams The anode is always placed on the left side. The cathode is placed on the right side. The salt bridge is represented by double vertical lines (||).

Back to your Diagram? Write the cell diagram for the redox reaction taking place under the diagram. Use the appropriate abbreviations.

Cell Potential Electrons only spontaneously flow one way in a redox reaction—from higher to lower potential energy, creating a potential difference. We quantify this amount and call it Cell Potential (E cell ) E o cell = E o right (cathode) – E o left (anode)

Example 1. Split the reaction into half reactions and determine their E o value. USE PURPLE SHEET! Indicate which would be the anode and cathode. 2. Construct a cell diagram for the reactions. 3. Determine the E o cell for the cell formed by each. Consider the following two reactions: a) Cu 2+ (aq) + Ba (s) → Cu (s) + Ba 2+ (aq) b) Al (s) + Sn 2+ (aq) → Al 3+ (aq) + Sn (s) Reduction Value is opposite/flip/inverse of Oxidation Value.

Answers a) Ba 2+ (aq) + 2e- → Ba (s) E o = V Anode Cu 2+(aq) + 2e- → Cu (s) E o = V Cathode b) Al 3+ (aq) 3e - → Al (s) E o = V Anode Sn 2+ (aq) → Sn (s) +2e - E o = V Cathode 2.a) Ba 2+ (aq) | Ba (s) || Cu (s) | Cu 2+(aq) 2.b) Al (s) | Al 3+ (aq) || Sn 2+ (aq) | Sn (s) 3.a) E o cell = (-2.92) = 3.26 V 3.b) E o cell = (-1.66) = V

Cell Potential Difference = Voltage If E o cell is positive the reaction is spontaneous and it is a voltaic cell Convert chemical energy into electrical energy If the E o cell is negative, the reaction is non- spontaneous and it is an electrolytic cell. Convert electrical energy into chemical energy