How Does Faraday's Formula F=Ne Relate to Decomposing Monovalent Ions?

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Faraday's formula, F=Ne, defines the relationship between the Faraday Constant (approximately 96500 C/mol) and the decomposition of monovalent ions. In this context, N represents Avogadro's number, and e signifies the charge of an electron. The formula indicates that one Faraday of electric charge is required to decompose one gram-ionic weight of monovalent ions. It is crucial to distinguish between the unit of capacitance, the Farad, denoted as [F], and Faraday's Constant, represented simply as F.

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my book writes about faraday's experiment, and I am totally clueless about this statement:

Faraday discovered that the same quanty of electricty, F, called the faraday and equal to about 96500C, always decomposes 1 gram-ionic weight of monovalet ions.

so he got some formula F=Ne, which N is avorgadro's number and e is the charge of an electron. but how does one farad = N e equate from the previous statement that my book made?
 
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The statement is not 1 Farad = Ne Coulombs. It's 1 Faraday = Ne. A monovalent ion is an ion which has one single positive or negative charge. Therefore, a mole of ions with + or - charge will have N*e coulombs of charge. This unit is called a Faraday, but is better known as the Faraday Constant, which is roughly 96500 C/mol.

A Farad is a unit of capacitance, and is mesured in Coulombs per Volt. In this case, Q = CV, and the Farad has the letter F, which is why I think you're getting confused.

Edit to make it more clear: A farad UNIT is denoted by [F], but Faraday's Constant is just F. It is much like how we denote capacitance the value by the letter C (as in Q = CV), but the unit [C] is a Couloumb. They are different and shouldn't be confused.
 
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what does it mean when it says " decomposes 1 gram-ionic weight of monovalet ions"?
 

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