How does electroplating work at the atomic scale?

AI Thread Summary
Electroplating involves the transfer of electrons from a battery to a cathode, where Cu2+ ions in solution are reduced to solid copper. The anode, made of copper, oxidizes and releases Cu2+ ions into the solution, which then associate with anions like SO42- to form copper sulfate. The movement of these ions from the anode to the cathode is primarily driven by three mechanisms: solution mixing, diffusion, and electric field drift. At extremely low temperatures, near absolute zero, the solution solidifies, halting electrolysis. If the ion concentration is significantly reduced, the efficiency of the electroplating process would also decline. Variations in electrical tension affect the movement of Cu2+ ions, influencing the rates of reduction and oxidation during the electroplating process.
frenchman
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
Hi, I am trying to understand how electroplating works.
With help of this wikipedia diagramm (http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b6/Copper_electroplating.svg/471px-Copper_electroplating.svg.png) I have already figured out (correct me if I am wrong) that it works something like this: the electrons from the battery go to the cathode (metal), and reduce the cu2+ in the solution, and electrons are take from the anode (Cu) thus oxydizing Cu(s) in Cu2+ ions.
Wikipedia states " Cu2+ associates with the anion SO42- in the solution to form copper sulfate"
What I don't understand is the following:
-Under what form do the two assiciate? is it still some kind of an ion, even though the association is neutral?
-how does that association travel from the anode to the cathode? Is it just heat that makes the ions move in the solution, and when one of them bumps into the cathode the cu2+ is reduced, or is there some kind of force which attracts the ions to the cathode?
And finally, related to that last question I have a few more:
-what would happen in a solution where the temperature would be reduced near absolute zero?
-what would happen in a solution where the numbers of ions would be reduced to a few in the entire solution?
-what is the role of tension in all this? How do variations of tension translate physically in terms of moving cu2+ ions and of reduction and oxydation?
Thanks in advance for any help
frenchman
 
Chemistry news on Phys.org
Generally speaking counterion doesn't matter. Cu2+ gets into the solution on anode and travels as Cu2+ to cathode.

Long before you get close to absolute zero solution solidifies, and the electrolysis slows down to a crawl.
 
ok but for the question about how ions move from one side to another, is there any force that help them get to the cathode, or is it only heat that makes them move from anode to cathode? Do the ions move in the solution forming some kind of a beam which goes from the anode to the cathode which would be caused by the attraction of the positively charged ions to the negatively charged cathode or are they randomly distributed in the solution?
 
Last edited:
Three basic sources of the transport - solution mixing, diffusion and drift due to the electric field. In typical applications drift can be safely ignored, and in the presence of mixing diffusion doesn't matter much as well.
 
ok thanks
 
It seems like a simple enough question: what is the solubility of epsom salt in water at 20°C? A graph or table showing how it varies with temperature would be a bonus. But upon searching the internet I have been unable to determine this with confidence. Wikipedia gives the value of 113g/100ml. But other sources disagree and I can't find a definitive source for the information. I even asked chatgpt but it couldn't be sure either. I thought, naively, that this would be easy to look up without...
I was introduced to the Octet Rule recently and make me wonder, why does 8 valence electrons or a full p orbital always make an element inert? What is so special with a full p orbital? Like take Calcium for an example, its outer orbital is filled but its only the s orbital thats filled so its still reactive not so much as the Alkaline metals but still pretty reactive. Can someone explain it to me? Thanks!!
Back
Top