Chemical Energy Energy that is released via chemical reactions.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Electricity & Magnetism at Work
Advertisements

PORTABLE POWER A Study of Cells and Batteries A Portable Power History Lesson 1786 – Luigi Galvani Connected pieces of iron and brass to a frog’s leg.
Electrical Energy Storage
Is the government taking away your incandescent light bulbs?
TOPIC 5 :PORTABLE POWER Science 9: Unit D: Electrical Science and Technology.
Electricity from Chemical Reactions
Ch. 21 Honors Chem. Electrochemistry
Electrochemical & Voltaic Cells
Electrochemical Cells
Cells and Voltage.
Cells and Voltage.
Chapter 201 Copyright © by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved Electrochemistry Electrochemistry =the study of the interchange of chemical.
Electrochemistry Ch. 17. Moving Electrons What kind of chemical reaction relates to the concept of electricity? What kind of chemical reaction relates.
Fuel Cells and Rechargeable Batteries C5. C.5.1 Describe how a hydrogen oxygen fuel cell works. Alkaline fuel cells usually use a mobilized or immobilized.
PH0101 UNIT-5 LECTURE 7 Introduction Types of battery Lithium battery
The Control of Electricity in Circuits
Cells and Batteries Section 1.4
Solutions of Electrolytes
Chapter 18 Electric Currents.
Electrochemistry is the chemistry of reactions which involve electron transfer. In spontaneous reactions electrons are released with energy which can.
Oxidation and Reduction Reactions that involve electron transfer Batteries and chemistry.
Chapter 22 REDOX.
Oxidation-Reduction Reactions LEO SAYS GER. Oxidation and Reduction (Redox) Electrons are transferred Spontaneous redox rxns can transfer energy Electrons.
Batteries 3 Parts: Cathode (positive charge), anode (negative charge) and an electrolyte (substance with free ions (positively charged atoms) Reactions.
Electrochemistry. Electrochemical Cells  Electrons are transferred between the particles being oxidized and reduced  Two types –Spontaneous = Voltaic.
Cells and Batteries. Electrons are involved in static charge – we know! How does this relate to electronic devices? Electric circuits! ▫ A closed path.
The alkaline cathode is a mixture of manganese dioxide, graphite and an electrolyte. The mixture is granulated, aged, and then compacted into a pressed.
Chapter 27 – Cells and Batteries
Chapter 20: Electrochemistry
The Battery Sam Sagan. The Need People needed a source of electricity to power portable devises. The energy source had to be durable, long-lasting, and.
Batteries use chemical reactions to produce electricity, but how do the chemical reactions work? Chemicals used in batteries can do two things: i) release.
Fuel Cells and Batteries. Electric circuit = a closed path along which electrons that are powered by an energy source can flow. Voltaic cell = a source.
An Introduction to Electroanalytical Chemistry Electrochemistry: The study of the interchange of chemical and electrical energy Oxidation is the loss of.
Electrochemistry.
Chapter 21.  Two types: ◦ Voltaic cell: electrons flow spontaneously ◦ Electrolytic cell: electrons are forced to flow.
Cell & Batteries. CELLS AND BATTERIES CELLS AND BATTERIES Understand the general features of cells and batteries Understand the general features of cells.
Electrochemical cells
Electrochemical Cells - producing an electric current with a redox reaction.
Examples In a certain room in your house, you use a 100 W light bulb. This light is on for 5 hours every day. How much energy does it use? 1 W = 1 J/s.
Electrochemical Cells (Batteries) Electrochemical Cells Section 10.5 (Batteries) Cell is another name for battery. Cells are classified as either.
Current Electricity Part 2
Electrochemical Cells in Actions Batteries and Fuel Cells Chapter 15.
 Conversion of chemical energy and electrical energy  All involve redox reactions  Electrochemical Cell: any device that converts chemical energy into.
Electrochemistry Cells and Batteries.
Chapter  Electrochemistry occurs through the use of spontaneous redox reactions.
Section 14.2 Voltaic Cells p Voltaic cells Voltaic cells convert chemical energy to electrical energy. In redox reactions, oxidizing agents.
Galvanic Cells Electrochem part II. Voltaic Cells In spontaneous oxidation- reduction (redox) reactions, electrons are transferred and energy is released.
OXIDATION ANY REACTION IN WHICH A SUBSTANCE LOSES ELECTRONS
How Do Batteries Work?  Eddy Giang  Scott Segawa  Eddy Giang  Scott Segawa.
Electrochemical Cells
ELECTROCHEMICAL CELLS. ELECTROCHEMISTRY The reason Redox reactions are so important is because they involve an exchange of electrons If we can find a.
Unit 11: Electric Current Many practical devices and applications are based upon the principles of static electricity. Electricity became an integral part.
Batteries are voltaic cells that use spontaneous reactions to provide energy for a variety of purposes. Section 2: Batteries K What I Know W What I Want.
Unit 11: Electric Current Many practical devices and applications are based upon the principles of static electricity. Electricity became an integral part.
Circuit Electricity. Electric Circuits The continuous flow of electrons in a circuit is called current electricity. Circuits involve… –Energy source,
Everyday examples of the Joule the energy required to lift a small apple one meter straight up. the energy released when that same apple falls one meter.
Oxidation-Reduction Reactions
Materials: wire, batteries, bulbs, and switch. Procedure:
Electrochemistry Simple cells, formation of metal ions in varying degrees, electric potential, electroplating, electrolysis.
Section 1.4 Cells and Batteries
Chapter 14 Electrochemical Cells
Electric Potential and Cells
Electrochemical Cells
Current, voltage, resistance
Electrochemical cells
An Introduction to Sediment Microbial Fuel Cells
Electrochemistry.
Electrochemistry Lesson 3
Cells and Batteries.
Redox in Electrochemistry
Presentation transcript:

Chemical Energy Energy that is released via chemical reactions. Often times release is through combustion such as energy generation via coal Another example is a battery

Batteries 3 Parts: Cathode (positive charge), anode (negative charge) and an electrolyte (substance with free ions (atoms with a net charge) Reactions occur at the anode which release electrons, they want to flow toward the cathode. But the electrolyte keeps the electrons from flowing to the cathode. If you create a closed circuit, and provide the electrons an alternate path to flow to the cathode, then they will follow that path. Now the chemical reactions at the anode change the anode and the electrolyte chemical composition, and eventually they can no longer occur. So the battery no longer produces electrons and current. When you recharge a battery ,you reverse the flow of electrons through the battery and reverse the the chemical process, restoring the battery to almost its original chemical state.

Earliest batteries-Baghdad battery Also called the Parthian Battery Artifacts discovered in 1936 near Baghdad. Terracotta jar 5 inches tall, containing a copper rolled up copper sheet housing a single iron rod. If it were filled with an acidic liquid, it could produce a current Use as a battery is uncertain, many different interpretations exist.

Leyden Jars Device that stores static electricity Earliest form of what we now call a capacitor Glass jar with metal foil coating the inner and outer surfaces. A rod is connected to the inner foil and sticks out of the mouth of the jar. Need to be initially charged

Galvanic Cells First attempt to derive energy from chemical reactions Consists of two metals (often copper and zinc) in a solution of a salt of the metal, connected by a salt bridge (really just a porous plate) Also called voltaic cells or electrochemical cells

Voltaic pile First true electric battery Alessandra Volta first showed that when copper and zinc discs are separated by cardboard soaked in brine, they act as a galvanic cell. He further showed that if you stack several pairs of these, you get a current to flow.

Inside a modern battery

Leaky batteries Alkaline batteries-popular form of battery for many devices Uses potassium hydroxide, which is an alkaline as the electrolyte, instead of ammonium chloride or zinc chloride. All three are acids and can corrode the outer steel shell and leak. In addition, as a battery is discharged, Hydrogen as is formed, which increases the pressure inside the battery. This can rupture the seals on the ends of the battery or the battery canister itself. They create a crystalline structure on the outside of the battery. It can cause oxidation on copper leads and damages circuits. A solution of water and baking soda or vinegar can be used to attempt to clean corroded contacts.

Lithium ion batteries In these batteries, lithium ions are extracted from the anode and inserted into the cathode to create a current. The electrolyte is often a lithium salt in a solution of ethylene carbonate Note: a lithium battery is a different battery, it has a lithium anode-these have a longer lifetime and can produce higher currents and voltages.

Celsius – another scale using height of liquid in a tube Heat Energy Temperature Scales: Fahrenheit – based on the height of liquid (often mercury or alcohol) in a glass tube. Celsius – another scale using height of liquid in a tube Kelvin-absolute scale True measure of energy Energy associated with the random motions of the molecules in a medium. Measured by temperature

Fahrenheit temperature scale Freezing point of water set at 32 and boiling point set at 212, so there is 180 degrees between them and each degree is 1/180 of the difference between these two points.

Celsius temperature scale Freezing point of water set at 0 and boiling point set at 100, so there is 100 degrees between them and each degree is 1/100 of the difference between these two points.

Kelvin temperature scale O K is absolute zero. All molecular motion stops. Interval set so that Δ1 K = Δ1 C So to convert from C to K K=C+273 To convert from F to K: K =(F - 32) * 5/9 + 273

Energy and mass are equivalent C = 3 x 108 m/s. Mass Energy E = mc2 Energy and mass are equivalent C = 3 x 108 m/s. C is a big number and its squared! So even if m is small, E is big. A small mass, converted to energy, gives a lot of energy!

Example