Elsa1234 said:
How does NaCl speed up the process of electrolysis of water ?
Wow, what a good question! I must have done this (or similar) many times over the years without asking, how does adding lots of Na
+ and Cl
- ions make it easier to electrolyse H
+ and OH
- ions?
I don't think dissolving NaCl in water has a great effect on the pH, so presumably it doesn't change the H
+ ion concentration much.
I can see that the availability of lots of Na
+ ions around ready to diffuse into the alkaline cathode region can maintain the electrical neutrality so that current is not blocked by polarisation, but where do the new H
+ ions come from? Once there is a big concentration of OH
- ions, presumably water molecules find it very difficult to dissociate to provide more H
+ ions.
The only thing that I can imagine is Na
+ ions being converted by an electron to Na and immediately reacting with a water molecule to liberate H. But Na
+ must have a very different electrode potential from H
+ so there might not be enough voltage available to do this?
I think that at the anode something like this does happen. In concentrated brine, Cl
2 is produced, but in dilute brine, some O
2 is also produced.
Let's hope a real chemist can help here!