Thank you for your explanation regarding resistance of cell. Notwithstanding, I have just found an extract from the Wikipedia regarding how NaCl increase the conductivity of the solution, which I still don't quite understand (mainly the bold statements as shown). Would you please also elaborate a bit?
Quote from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrolyte
Electrochemistry
Main article: electrolysis
When electrodes are placed in an electrolyte and a voltage is applied, the electrolyte will conduct electricity. Lone electrons normally cannot pass through the electrolyte; instead, a chemical reaction occurs at the cathode consuming electrons from the anode, and another reaction occurs at the anode producing electrons to be taken up by the cathode. As a result, a negative charge cloud develops in the electrolyte around the cathode, and a positive charge develops around the anode. The ions in the electrolyte move to neutralize these charges so that the reactions can continue and the electrons can keep flowing.
For example, in a solution of ordinary salt (sodium chloride, NaCl) in water, the cathode reaction will be
2H2O + 2e− → 2OH− + H2
and hydrogen gas will bubble up; the anode reaction is
2NaCl → 2 Na+ + Cl2
and chlorine gas will be liberated.
The positively charged sodium ions Na+ will react towards the cathode neutralizing the negative charge of OH− there, and the negatively charged oxide ions O2− will react towards the anode neutralizing the positive charge of H+ there. Without the ions from the electrolyte, the charges around the electrode would slow down continued electron flow; diffusion of H+ and OH− through water to the other electrode takes longer than movement of the much more prevalent salt ions.
In other systems, the electrode reactions can involve the metals of the electrodes as well as the ions of the electrolyte.
It mentions that "The positively charged sodium ions Na+ will react towards the cathode neutralizing the negative charge of OH− there, and the negatively charged oxide ions O2− will react towards the anode neutralizing the positive charge of H+ there.". Concerning the first statement, I think there is not much OH- ions around the anode. It is because the dissociation of water molecule is slow in nature. There ought to be only little OH- ions around the cathode. So, relatively speaking, only little Na+ ions should be enough for "neutralizing the charge of OH-" (though I don't know how the neutralization process is). Hence, I deduce that the excess Na+ ions are of no use. However, the fact is that the more concentrated the NaCl(aq) is, the larger the voltage produced, provided that all other variables, such as temperature, metal couple used, distance of electrodes, are kept constant. It seems that the excess Na+ ions still have other functions apart from "neutralizing the charge of OH-", but what are they?