Electrolysis of water and actual electrode potential.

AI Thread Summary
In the discussion about electrolytic cells, it is clarified that the voltage source (Vs) does not directly dictate the potential on the electrodes but influences the current and charge accumulation. The electrolysis of water requires a minimum potential difference of 1.23 V between the electrodes for gas evolution to initiate, but the absolute potentials on each electrode are not simply half of this value. The concept of charge on the electrodes is differentiated from the ionic charges in the solution; ions do not contribute to the electrode charge but instead form a double layer that influences the overall potential. The analogy with capacitors is used to explain that the potential difference remains the same regardless of the absolute voltage levels of the electrodes. The discussion emphasizes the complexity of the electrochemical processes and the importance of understanding the role of double layers in electrolytic cells.
Phy1
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For an electrolytic cell, the voltage source Vs, does not contribute directly to the potential on the electrolytic electrodes. Vs determines the current and can add charges to the electrodes. This can be observed when charging supercapacitors and is discussed in these threads :
https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/supercapacitor-charging-voltage.594372/
https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/ultracapacitor-charging-voltage.680719/

Question:
What is the actual potential on the electrolytic electrodes for the electrolysis of water?

Example:
An electrolytic cell has carbon electrodes (make them identical commercially available activated carbon supercapacitor electrodes, so a charge has to build up for a few seconds) and sulfuric acid H2SO4 electrolyte.
Positive charge electrode reaction: 2 H2O(l) → O2(g) + 4 H+(aq) + 4e− 1.23 V
Negative charge electrode reaction: 2 H+(aq) + 2e− → H2(g) 0.00 V
1.23V is the minimum Vs should be for hydrogen and oxygen generation to start in this cell.
(There are many factors that increase this value, but use 1.23V for this example.)

Charge is added to each electrode in equal amounts. The actual potential on each electrode for this cell is (1.23V/2)=0.615V. The positive charge electrode is +0.615V and the negative charge electrode is -0.615V. The electrodes are is series, so the potentials add to 1.23V. Breaking the charge down further: the positive charge electrode has (+0.3075 charge and -0.3075 ionic charge from SO4-2) and the negative charge electrode has (-0.3075 charge and +0.3075 ionic charge from H+)

Is this correct?
 
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Phy1 said:
Is this correct?

No.

You are more or less right about 1.23 V being the potential difference between the electrodes when the gas starts to evolve. After that you are mixing several different concepts in a way that I fail to understand (but the mix is definitely wrong).

Just because the total voltage is 1.23 V doesn't mean absolute voltages are ±0.0615 V.

Charges on electrodes are not these of the ions in the solution. Ions are attracted to the charged electrodes, that's one of the reasons why they migrate in the solution, but their charge is not part of the charge of the electrodes. If anything they neutralize the electrode charge becoming part of a double layer on the surface.
 
Borek said:
You are more or less right about 1.23 V being the potential difference between the electrodes when the gas starts to evolve. After that you are mixing several different concepts in a way that I fail to understand (but the mix is definitely wrong).

Hi Borek,
If you like, the terms can be changed from positive charge electrode to electrolytic anode and negative charged electrode to electrolytic cathode.
Picture1.GIF


Borek said:
Charges on electrodes are not these of the ions in the solution. Ions are attracted to the charged electrodes, that's one of the reasons why they migrate in the solution, but their charge is not part of the charge of the electrodes. If anything they neutralize the electrode charge becoming part of a double layer on the surface.

Think of charging a regular capacitor. If you charge a capacitor to 2V then the positive plate gets +1V and the negative plate gets -1V. When the capacitor discharges, the potential difference is 2V. The electric double layer forms a capacitor and the ions form half of the charge.
 
Phy1 said:
If you charge a capacitor to 2V then the positive plate gets +1V and the negative plate gets -1V.

Depends on what you assume to be the reference point. What if one plate is at 60 V (measured against the ground) and the other at 62 V (again, measured against the ground)?

There are two double layers, one on each electrode, so if anything, the solution acts as a two capacitors in the row.
 
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