Understanding Electron Flow in EMF Cells: Anode to Cathode or Cathode to Anode?

AI Thread Summary
In the discussed electrochemical cell, electrons flow from the anode to the cathode when the external potential (Eext) is less than 1.1V and from cathode to anode when Eext exceeds 1.1V. However, regardless of the external conditions, the fundamental definition remains that electrons always flow from the anode to the cathode. This is due to the nature of oxidation occurring at the anode and reduction at the cathode. The confusion arises from the varying external potentials, but the underlying principle of electron flow is consistent. Understanding reduction potentials is crucial, as electrons move from the more negative to the more positive potential, influencing the cell's voltage based on ion concentrations.
Raghav Gupta
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Homework Statement


A variable , opposite external potential ## E_{ext} ## is applied to the cell Zn | Zn2+ (1M) || Cu2+ (1M) | Cu, of potential 1.1V . When Eext < 1.1 V and Eext > 1.1V , respectively electrons flow from :
1. anode to cathode and cathode to anode
2. cathode to anode and anode to cathode
3. cathode to anode in both cases
4. anode to cathode in both cases

Homework Equations



NA

The Attempt at a Solution


At anode oxidation happens and at cathode reduction.
So electrons are moving from anode to cathode when Eext < 1.1 V and cathode to anode when Eext > 1.1 V
So option 1 is looking correct.
In answer key option 4 that is anode to cathode in both cases is given.
Why?
 
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My guess is this is almost a "trick" question,
The anode is defined as the electrode where electrons leave a cell and the cathode where electrons enter a cell. So no matter which way the current flows, external to the cell electrons always flow from anode to cathode.
When you switch the battery, you switch the names of the electrodes.
 
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Merlin3189 said:
My guess is this is almost a "trick" question,
The anode is defined as the electrode where electrons leave a cell and the cathode where electrons enter a cell. So no matter which way the current flows, external to the cell electrons always flow from anode to cathode.
When you switch the battery, you switch the names of the electrodes.
Thanks, got the tricky part.
 
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