Dependency of electrolyte conductivity to temperature?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the relationship between electrolyte conductivity and temperature. It is established that, unlike metals, the conductivity of electrolytes typically increases with rising temperature due to enhanced ion mobility and reaction rates. Participants clarify the distinction between bulk charge movement and interactions at the electrode phase boundary, emphasizing that the latter does not significantly affect overall conductivity. There is no universal law governing this relationship; it can vary from linear to polynomial approximations depending on the specific conditions. Understanding this relationship is crucial for designing effective experiments in chemistry labs.
thisnameowns
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Hi, I'm new here.

As I was designing my IB lab, this idea popped in my head: Although the electrical conductivity of metals (and other solids) decrease as temperature rises, what about electrolytes?

For all I know, electrolytes conduct electricity by charged ions, which react with both electrodes, conducting electricity. As I've learned in my chemistry class, a higher temperature means more collision between these ions, speeding up reaction time.

All this led me to think that electrolytes would conduct electricity better as temperature rises. I would really appreciate it if you guys can verify whether this is plausible as I do not want to design a pointless lab.

Hi, I'm new here.

As I was designing my IB lab, this idea popped in my head: Although the electrical conductivity of metals (and other solids) decrease as temperature rises, what about electrolytes?

For all I know, electrolytes conduct electricity by charged ions, which react with both electrodes, conducting electricity. As I've learned in my chemistry class, a higher temperature means more collision between these ions, speeding up reaction time.

All this led me to think that electrolytes would conduct electricity better as temperature rises. I would really appreciate it if you guys can verify whether this is plausible or am I totally off.

Thanks a bunch
 
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Conductivity of the solution and speed at which charge moves through the phase boundary are two separate things, I have a feeling you are trying to mix them - don't.

But you are right that typically conductivity of the solutions increases with the temperature.

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thanks for responding. I was indeed mixing up the two as I thought the faster/easier the charges move the more conductive a substance is.

As that's not the case, can you explain why conductivity of electrolytes would increase as temperature increases? Also, I'd like to know wether this is a directly porportional (linear) relationship (over a limited temp. range), inversely proportional relationship, or some more exotic variant (power, polynomial, etc).
 
thisnameowns said:
thanks for responding. I was indeed mixing up the two as I thought the faster/easier the charges move the more conductive a substance is.

Actually that's correct - but that's when the charge moves in bulk of the solution. Whatever happens at the electrodes doesn't matter. You must misunderstood my previous post - phase boundary is where the electrode (usually solid) meets with the solution (usually liquid). You have mentioned electrons entering the solution at the electrodes in our original post, that's the part I was referring to.

As that's not the case, can you explain why conductivity of electrolytes would increase as temperature increases? Also, I'd like to know wether this is a directly porportional (linear) relationship (over a limited temp. range), inversely proportional relationship, or some more exotic variant (power, polynomial, etc).

There is no universal law describing the dependence. Sometimes it is linear, sometimes it can be nicely approximated by 2nd or 3rd degree polynomial.
 
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