lasha1
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In electrolysis of nacl where is sodium? Ok clorine is producing as gas but sodium?
Radhakrishnam said:When we electrolyze aqueous NaCl solution using electrodes, such as graphite, Chlorine gas is evolved at the anode and Sodium metal is formed at the cathode - but Sodium being highly reactive metal - reacts with water producing Hydrogen gas and Sodium Hydroxide.
Radhakrishnam said:What you wrote is not clear to me - 'water reacts directly producing hydrogen'. Water reacts with what?
'We observe exactly the same reaction in solutions that contain other cations'. What reaction are you referring to?
Radhakrishnam said:Now, suppose our aim is to electrolyse a solution such as aqueous NaCl to produce sodium metal, then we go to much higher cell potentials when the potential of the cathode is forced below the equilibrium potential value for reduction of Na+ ions. Then Na deposition becomes possible. However, sodium is never found at the cathode in aqueous solution electrolysis. The reason is that Na reacts spontaneously with water to produce hydrogen gas and sodium hydroxide.
Radhakrishnam said:When we force the electrode potential to values lower than that corresponding to the equilibrium potential of sodium deposition (using a potentiostat, for instance), sodium deposits,