Spirochete said:
While I admit I'm a bit shaky on redox potentials other than the fact that they're a measure of how much something "wants" to be reduced, and the fact that redox reactions generate energy. . .
I've never heard the concept of redox potentials being applied to the nerve impulse. Usually it's explained in terms of electrochemical gradients and how charged particles, usually cations, move in response to that gradient.
Are you sure that your example with the battery applies?
Now that I've thought about it---yeah, I'm sure. "Electrochemical gradient" is EXACTLY the reason batteries work. It's just that in batteries, there's only one chemical species in each half-cell that's being oxidized/reduced. In cells, it's a thousand times more complicated, but the fundamental reason electrons flow is the same. Oxidation/reduction.
I know a way you can test it.
Mix up a solution in a beaker that has the same chemicals in the same concentration as the INSIDE of a cell.
Then mix up a solution in a different beaker that has the same chemicals in the same concentrations as the OUTSIDE of a cell.
Then run a wire from a voltmeter to each and see if there's not a POTENTIAL difference between them.
Hmm. You seem to think electrons can flow only when there's a charge difference, a difference in the number of electrons in two places.
Not quite. The electrons will also flow when there's a CHEMICAL energy difference.
For example, let's consider what happen when you put a stick of Zn in a solution of Cu+2. BOTH IN THE SAME SOLUTION.
(For all you other chemists out there, yes, I'm skipping some details.)
What we start out with is Zn+0, zinc metal, and Cu+2. But that particular solution is at NOT its lowest potential energy point. There's a CHEMICAL ENERGY instability. What's actually more stable is a solution of Zn+2 and Cu+0.
And so the system in the beaker rolls downhill, down the chemical energy hill. A reaction occurs.
Zn+0 + Cu+2 ====> Zn+2 + Cu+0
Cu+0, copper metal, plates out all over the beaker, and the zinc dissolves.
Note this reaction is, fundamentally, AN ELECTRON FLOW. AN ELECTRON FLOW HAS OCCURRED FROM THE ZINC TO THE COPPER.
Right?
And because this reaction is fundamentally an electron flow, we can actually put the two reactants in DIFFERENT beakers---and the reaction will STILL happen! As long we put an electrically conductive bridge---SOMETHING THAT WILL CARRY ELECTRONS----between them.