Quick question about Electrochemistry anode and cathode

AI Thread Summary
In the discussion about electrochemistry, the correct identification of anodes and cathodes for the reactions Pb/Pb2+ and Ag/Ag+, as well as Zn/Zn2+ and Ni/Ni2+, is clarified. Pb is identified as the anode and Ag as the cathode in the first reaction, with electrons flowing toward Ag. For the second reaction, Zn is the anode and Ni is the cathode, with electrons flowing toward Ni. The concept of oxidation occurring at the anode and reduction at the cathode is emphasized, along with the importance of standard reduction potentials. The discussion concludes with confirmation that the initial confusion stemmed from a minor typo regarding the oxidation states.
qpham26
Messages
53
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


Pb/Pb2+ and Ag/Ag+

Ni/Ni2+ and Zn/Zn2+
Which one is the anode and cathode?
Toward which metal do the electrons flow?



The Attempt at a Solution



2Ag2+ + Pb ⇔ 2Ag + Pb2+

Pb is anode
and Ag is cathode

e- go toward Ag.


Zn + Ni2+ ⇔ Zn2+ + Ni

Zn is anode
and Ni is cathode

e- go toward Ni.
Is this correct?

Thanks.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Unfortunately, you got them backwards in both cases.

Remember reduction (increase in number of electrons) occurs at the cathode while oxidation occurs at the anode. So check which of the elements is more electropositive. That element will form your anode. The periodic table will help you.
 
I don't understand, i used the same method for other problems and I got right answer.
This is what I did.
because for Pb/Pb2+ and Ag/Ag+
the standard reduction at 25 C

Pb2+ + 2e-⇔Pb(s) E = -0.13
Ag++e-⇔Ag(s) E = 0.80

So flip top eq to get an oxidation of Pb and Ag is already in reduction form
so ox = anode
and red = cathode?

so total E = 0.80 + 0.13 = 0.93

thanks for your time.
 
qpham26 said:
2Ag2+ + Pb ⇔ 2Ag + Pb2+

Almost correct. Ag is not 2+, but I assume it is just a typo.

Zn + Ni2+ ⇔ Zn2+ + Ni

Correct.

Although you should use → in both cases.
 
Borek said:
Almost correct. Ag is not 2+, but I assume it is just a typo.



Correct.

Although you should use → in both cases.

Yes it was a typo.
And since it is correct we can see that
Pb lost electron so it is the anode?

same goes for the other case.
 
Thread 'Confusion regarding a chemical kinetics problem'
TL;DR Summary: cannot find out error in solution proposed. [![question with rate laws][1]][1] Now the rate law for the reaction (i.e reaction rate) can be written as: $$ R= k[N_2O_5] $$ my main question is, WHAT is this reaction equal to? what I mean here is, whether $$k[N_2O_5]= -d[N_2O_5]/dt$$ or is it $$k[N_2O_5]= -1/2 \frac{d}{dt} [N_2O_5] $$ ? The latter seems to be more apt, as the reaction rate must be -1/2 (disappearance rate of N2O5), which adheres to the stoichiometry of the...
I don't get how to argue it. i can prove: evolution is the ability to adapt, whether it's progression or regression from some point of view, so if evolution is not constant then animal generations couldn`t stay alive for a big amount of time because when climate is changing this generations die. but they dont. so evolution is constant. but its not an argument, right? how to fing arguments when i only prove it.. analytically, i guess it called that (this is indirectly related to biology, im...
Back
Top