scientifico said:
Hello, in water NaCl break itself into positive and negative ions but i didn't understood how exactly works the electricity conductions... the negative ions go to positive so seen that they are negative shouldn't repel the flow of electricity causing no conduction?
thanks!
scientifico said:
You mean like positive ions "charge" themself with the electrons of the flow ond "discharge" them at the positive point?
I think that this thread doesn't belong here. It must be moved to chemistry section.
Anyways, coming back to the question. Hii Scientifico ! Always remember that salts conduct electricity when they are in aqueous solution or in fused/molten state. NaCl is dissociated in aqueous solution into Na
+ and Cl
- ions. Electricity is conducted by movement of ions , yes there is mass movement and loss of energy too unlike metallic conductors. Let us assume that cathode and anode both are made of Graphite. If we consider water as aqeous solution then H
2O <---->H
+ + OH
-. Here Na
+ and Cl
- ions are attracted to respective electrodes rather than H
+ and OH
- because :
1. We are taking concentrated NaCl solution. Probability of NaCl ions to be attracted to electrodes is more than H
2O ions.
2. After all Na
+ has greater mass than Hydrogen so it repels H
+ here and there. So is Cl
- to OH
-.
(Electrification series play negligible role)
Na
+ is attracted towards cathode. It gains electrons from cathode(negative electrode) and become neutral Na and sticks to cathode. This way cathode looses electrons.
Cl
- is attracted towards anode. It looses electrons to anode(positive electrode) and become neutral Cl and is released to atmosphere as Cl
2. This way anode gains electrons and these electrons flow to positive terminal of battery. This is how electricity is conducted by ions.
As LostConjugate marks "So from the point of view of the potential loop the circuit is completed."