On operation principles of zinc-manganese alkaline batteries

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The discussion centers on the chemical reactions involved in alkaline batteries, specifically the oxidation of zinc to zinc oxide and the reduction of manganese dioxide. The anode half-reaction is typically represented as the formation of zinc oxide, but there is a debate regarding the formation of zinc hydroxide instead, given that metals in water solutions generally produce hydroxides. This raises questions about the source of zinc oxide in alkaline batteries. Additionally, the conversation highlights gas production as an undesirable reaction in batteries, noting that zinc reacts with sodium hydroxide and water to produce hydrogen gas. A key inquiry is why a similar reaction does not occur with potassium hydroxide (KOH) in alkaline batteries. The discussion concludes that the oxidation of zinc to zinc ions (Zn2+) is crucial, with the selection of counterions aimed at optimizing the reaction's practicality, while the formation of zinc oxide and its solubility in the presence of hydroxide ions is also considered.
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The Wikipedia article on alkaline batteries says that they operate at the expense of the oxidation of zinc metal to zinc oxide and the reduction of manganese dioxide to Mn2O3. Anode half reaction is written as

Zn + 2 OH → ZnO + H2O + 2 e.

However we know that metals reacting with water solutions produce hydroxides rather than oxides. So I would write the above reaction as

Zn + 2 OH → Zn(OH)2 + 2 e.

The other Wikipedia article on zinc hydroxide says that it is a rather stable compound that decomposes at 125°C. My first question is where zinc oxide comes from in alkaline batteries?

Gas production is an unwanted process in batteries. It is known that zinc react with sodium hydroxide and water producing hydrogen gas (see chemiday.com):

Zn + 2 NaOH + 2 H2O → Na2[Zn(OH)4] + H2.

My second question is why we have not a similar reaction with KOH in alkaline batteries?
 
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What we really get is a mixture of Zn2+ complexes with OH-, depending on the concentration and amount of water some of them can decompose into ZnO, but it will also dissolve back when there is a lot of free OH-. The only thing that really matters is that the Zn gets oxidized to Zn2+, counterions are selected to make the reaction as practical as possible.
 
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