How does the electrolyte in a battery work?

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The electrolyte in a battery allows for the movement of positive ions while the copper wire conducts electrons due to the distinct physical processes involved in each medium. In an electrolyte, ions such as those from NaCl dissociate into positive and negative charges, facilitating the movement of cations towards the cathode during redox reactions. The charge separation from these reactions generates an electric field, prompting ions to migrate in a way that maintains electrical neutrality. The behavior of ions in the electrolyte is influenced by the electrode reactions, which dictate the flow of charge carriers. Understanding these processes clarifies how different materials transport charge in a battery system.
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An electrolyte is neutral, so what allows it to conduct exclusively positive ions in a battery and not electrons?
 
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Cu wire is neutral, so what allows it to conduct exclusively electrons in an external circuit and not positive ions?
 
Bystander said:
Cu wire is neutral, so what allows it to conduct exclusively electrons in an external circuit and not positive ions?

I don't understand what your getting at.
 
You're objecting to one "neutral" medium transporting charge carriers, and you have no objection to a second "neutral" medium transporting charge carriers. It's the same question. What physical processes are you interested in understanding?
 
Bystander said:
You're objecting to one "neutral" medium transporting charge carriers, and you have no objection to a second "neutral" medium transporting charge carriers. It's the same question. What physical processes are you interested in understanding?
I see, I want to understand what physical process allows either conductor (the Cu or the electrolyte) to transport a exclusively a positive or negative charge
 
Cu atoms are playing "hot potato" with electrons given a potential difference between the ends of the conductor that is sufficient that electrons can make the jump, or be tossed from one atom to the next. What are analogous structures/entities in an electrolyte solution?
 
Bystander said:
Cu atoms are playing "hot potato" with electrons given a potential difference between the ends of the conductor that is sufficient that electrons can make the jump, or be tossed from one atom to the next. What are analogous structures/entities in an electrolyte solution?
In an electrolyte, a the charges in a substance such as NaCl are divorced from one another and form ions i.e. negative and positive charges. If there are equal proportion of each in an electrolyte(making the substance neutral), what then makes the electrolytes cater to positive ions in particular?
 
Generally, they do not. Depends on the cathodic and anodic reactions in the cell. If electrode potentials are such that cations are being reduced, cations will be moving from the "cell anode" where they are constantly being produced either by oxidation of anode material, or components of the solution to the "cell cathode" where they are reduced. Any given volume increment of the solution remains electrically neutral as anions play "hot potato" with the cationic drift. Other cell and electrode reactions might be forming anions at the "cell cathode" and those anions move to the anode to be oxidized.
 
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This is a good diagram of the flooded lead acid battery redox. The charge separation from the chemical reactions creates an electric field and the free ions in the electrolyte move to neutralize the field in response until the system reaches equilibrium.

http://ecee.colorado.edu/~ecen4517/materials/Battery.pdf
 
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