Electrochemistry Basics
Electrochemistry deals with the relationship between electrical energy and chemical energy changes in redox reactions.
Electrical Resistance & Conductance
1) Resistance (R)
- Resistance measures obstruction to the flow of current.
- R ∝ l/a → R = ρ(l/a)
- ρ = resistivity (specific resistance)
- Unit of resistance: ohm (Ω)
2) Resistivity / Specific Resistance (ρ)
- ρ = R(a/l)
- If l = 1 cm and a = 1 cm2, then R = ρ
- Unit (cgs): Ω·cm; Unit (SI): Ω·m
3) Conductance (C)
- Conductance measures ease of current flow; it is additive.
- C = 1/R
- Unit (cgs): mho or Ω−1; Unit (SI): Siemens (S)
4) Conductivity / Specific Conductance (κ)
- Conductivity is inverse of resistivity: κ = 1/ρ
- Defined as conductance of a solution of length 1 cm and area 1 cm2.
- Unit (cgs): Ω−1 cm−1; Unit (SI): S m−1
5) Molar Conductivity / Molar Conductance (Λm)
- Conducting power of all ions produced by dissolving 1 mole of electrolyte.
- Λm = κ × 1000 / M
- Unit (cgs): Ω−1 cm2 mol−1; Unit (SI): S m2 mol−1
6) Equivalent Conductivity (Λeq)
- Conducting power of all ions produced by dissolving 1 gram equivalent of electrolyte.
- Λeq = κ × 1000 / N (N = normality)
- Unit (cgs): Ω−1 cm2 (g equiv)−1; Unit (SI): S m2 equiv−1
7) Conductivity from Cell Constant
- Conductivity = Conductance × Cell constant
- Cell constant = l/a
- Unit: cm−1 (cgs) or m−1 (SI)
Factors Affecting Electrolytic Conductance
- Nature of electrolyte
- Concentration: molar conductance increases on dilution (decrease in concentration)
- Temperature: conductivity increases with increase in temperature
Kohlrausch’s Law
Kohlrausch’s law: Equivalent conductivity at infinite dilution is the sum of the equivalent conductivities of cations and anions.
- Λ0(AxBy) = x λ0A+ + y λ0B−
Applications (names)
- Determination of Λ0 for weak electrolytes
- Degree of ionisation of weak electrolyte
- Ionisation constant of weak electrolyte
- Solubility of sparingly soluble salts
Transport (Transference) Number
Transport number = fraction of total current carried by an ion.
- tanion = current carried by anion / total current
- tcation = current carried by cation / total current
- tanion + tcation = 1
Determination (names)
- Hittorf’s method
- Moving boundary method
- EMF method
- From ionic mobility
Types of Cells (Quick Compare)
- Primary cells: cannot be recharged (dry cell, mercury cell)
- Secondary cells: rechargeable (lead storage battery, Ni–Cd cell)
- Fuel cells: energy from combustion converted to electrical energy (H2–O2 fuel cell)
Main Features of Common Cells
| Cell / Battery | Anode | Cathode | Electrolyte |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dry cell | Zinc | Graphite | MnO2 + C (touching cathode); NH4Cl + ZnCl2 (touching anode) |
| Mercury cell | Zinc | Graphite | HgO + KOH (moist) |
| Lead storage battery | Lead | Lead dioxide | H2SO4 (38%) |
| Ni–Cd cell | Cadmium | Nickel dioxide | KOH (solution) |
Conductors, Electrolytes & Electrolysis
Conductors vs Insulators
- Conductors allow current to pass; insulators do not.
Electronic (Metallic) vs Electrolytic Conductors
| Electronic conductors | Electrolytic conductors |
|---|---|
| Current due to flow of electrons | Current due to flow of ions |
| No decomposition of substance | Flow accompanied by decomposition |
| Conduction decreases with temperature | Conduction increases with temperature (dissociation increases) |
Key Definitions
- Electrolyte: conducts electricity in molten/solution state and is decomposed by it.
- Electrode (half-cell): electronic conductor in contact with an electrolytic conductor.
- Electrode potential: potential difference at interface of electronic and electrolytic conductors.
- Cell: assembly of two half-cells.
Electrolysis (Core Rules)
- Cations migrate to cathode and are reduced: Mn+ + ne− → M
- Anions migrate to anode and are oxidised: An− → A + ne−
- Products depend on:
- Nature of electrodes (attackable / non-attackable)
- Nature of electrolyte (molten / aqueous)
- Charge density passed
- Concentration of solution
Examples: Discharge Products (as given)
| Electrolyte | Electrode | Cathodic reaction | Anodic reaction |
|---|---|---|---|
| NaCl (fused) | Pt | Na+ + e− → Na | 2Cl− → Cl2 + 2e− |
| NaCl (aq, very dilute) | Pt | 2H+ + 2e− → H2 | 4OH− → 2H2O + O2 + 4e− |
| NaCl (aq) | Hg | Na+ + e− → Na | 2Cl− → Cl2 + 2e− |
| HCl (aq) | Pt | 2H+ + 2e− → H2 | 2Cl− → Cl2 + 2e− |
| NaNO3 (aq) | Pt | 2H+ + 2e− → H2 | 4OH− → 2H2O + O2 + 4e− |
| CuSO4 (aq) | Pt | Cu2+ + 2e− → Cu | 4OH− → 2H2O + O2 + 4e− |
| AgNO3 (aq) | Pt | Ag+ + e− → Ag | 4OH− → 2H2O + O2 + 4e− |
Electrolysis Notes
- Electrolysis occurs only at electrodes: oxidation at anode, reduction at cathode.
- If two or more similar ions compete for discharge: higher discharge potential → lower tendency to discharge.
- Discharge occurs only during passage of charge.
Faraday’s Laws of Electrolysis
First Law
- Mass deposited (w) is proportional to charge (Q): w ∝ Q, where Q = it
- w = Z × i × t (Z = electrochemical equivalent)
Second Law
- For same charge passed through different electrolytes: w ∝ E (E = equivalent weight)
- w1/w2 = E1/E2 (Q constant)
Quick Notes
- Passing 1 coulomb deposits Z g of substance.
- Passing 1 faraday deposits E g of substance.
Applications of Electrolysis (names)
- Extraction of metals
- Preparation of chemicals
- Preparation of organic compounds
- Corrosion and its prevention
- Purification of metals
Electrolytic Cells vs Electrochemical Cells
| Electrolytic cells | Electrochemical cells |
|---|---|
| Current causes chemical change | Chemical change produces current |
| Electrical energy → chemical energy | Chemical energy → electrical energy |
Electrochemical Cells
Chemical Cells (Daniel Cell)
- Representation: Zn | Zn2+ || Cu2+ | Cu
- Anode (oxidation): Zn → Zn2+ + 2e−
- Cathode (reduction): Cu2+ + 2e− → Cu
- Overall: Zn + Cu2+ → Zn2+ + Cu
- Electrons released at anode flow through external circuit to cathode.
Concentration Cells
- No net chemical change; cell works due to concentration difference.
- General form: M | M+(C1) || M+(C2) | M where C2 > C1
- Electrode in more dilute solution acts as anode.
Nernst Equation (at 25°C)
For Metal Electrode
- General: M ⇌ Mn+ + ne−
- E = E° − (0.0591/n) log(aOS/aRS)
For Non-metal / Anion Electrode
- General: A + ne− ⇌ An−
- E = E° − (0.0591/n) log(aRS/aOS)
Applications of Nernst Equation
(i) EMF of cell
- E°cell = E°(OP) + E°(RP)
- Ecell = E(OP) + E(RP)
(ii) EMF and Equilibrium Constant
- ΔG° = −nFE°
- 0.0591 logK / n = E° (at 25°C)
(iii) Heat of reaction (as given)
- ΔH = nF [ T(∂E/∂T)P − E ]
- (∂E/∂T)P = temperature coefficient of EMF
Other uses (names)
- To decide spontaneity of cell reaction
- To evaluate solubility product
- To evaluate pH
Reversible vs Irreversible Cells (Test)
- If E(test) slightly > E(external): current flows from test to external; reaction occurs.
- If E(test) slightly < E(external): current flows external to test; reaction reverses.
- If E(test) = E(external): no current; no reaction.
Electrochemical Series (Key Points)
- Arranged by tendency to lose electrons (oxidation): decreasing trend of E°(OP)
- More +ve E°(OP) → higher tendency to get oxidised
- Stronger oxidant has weaker conjugate reductant (and vice versa)
- Reducing power of metals decreases down the series
- Oxidising power of metal ions increases down the series
- Metals above hydrogen displace H2 from dilute acids
- Metal higher in series displaces metal below from its salt solution
- Halide reducing power: HI > HBr > HCl > HF
Lead Storage Battery & Corrosion (Quick Notes)
Lead Storage Battery (Discharge)
- Anode: Pb + SO42− → PbSO4 + 2e−
- Cathode: PbO2 + SO42− + 4H+ + 2e− → PbSO4 + 2H2O
- Overall: Pb + PbO2 + 2H2SO4 → 2PbSO4 + 2H2O
- As H2SO4 is consumed, battery voltage drops.
- Charging reactions are reverse of discharge.
Corrosion
- Metal surface changes to oxides/sulphides/carbonates due to atmospheric attack.
- Enhanced by: impurities, moisture, electrolytes (e.g., saline water).
- Prevention:
- Barrier protection: oil/grease, paints, electroplating
- Sacrificial protection: coating with more electropositive metal (e.g., Zn) — galvanisation
- Electrical protection: connect iron to more electropositive metal using a wire
Redox Quick Revision
- Loss of electron = oxidation; gain of electron = reduction
- Increase in oxidation number = oxidation; decrease = reduction
- Oxidised substance acts as reducing agent; reduced substance acts as oxidising agent
Equivalent Mass
- Equivalent mass of oxidising agent = (Formula mass of O.A.) / (No. of electrons gained)
- Equivalent mass of reducing agent = (Formula mass of R.A.) / (No. of electrons lost)
Types of Redox Reactions (examples)
- Intermolecular: Zn + 2HCl → ZnCl2 + H2
- Intramolecular: 2KClO3 → 2KCl + 3O2
- Disproportionation: 2Cu+ → Cu2+ + Cu
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Last modified: December 14, 2025
