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Equilibrium Electrochemistry Part 8 Physical chemistry For 2nd year students Chemistry Engineering Electrochemical potential In electrochemistry, the electrochemical potential ot detaiverbba semitemos, ECP-: si , a thermodynamic measure that combines the concepts of energy stored in the form of chemicalpotential and electrostatics. Electrochemical potential is expressed in the unit of J/mol. electrochemical potential is the mechanical work done in bringing 1 mole of an ion from a standard state to a specified concentration and electrical potential. According to theIUPAC definition, it is the partial molar Gibbs energy of the substance at the specified electric potential, where the substance is in a specified phase. Electrochemical potential can be expressed as » , where: is the electrochemical potential of species i, J/mol is the chemical potential of the species i, J/mol is the valency (charge) of the ion i, dimensionless is Faraday's Constant, C/mol is the local electrostatic potential, V. In the special case of an uncharged atom, = 0 and so =0 Component of an Electrochemical Cell – Cell Potential A cell can be made from 2 electrodes (metals or electronic conductors) dipping into an electrolyte solution and connected by an external circuit. The electrical potential or voltage, E, between the two electrodes in a cell can be measured by connecting a voltmeter. The measured voltage is known as the cell potential, E. Older terminology refers to the electromotive force, EMF. The cell potential is related to the Gibbs Free Energy change for the overall reaction carried out by the cell. Cell Potential ΔG = -nFE ΔG = Gibbs Free Energy change, J moln = number of electrons transferred in the cell reaction F = Faraday’s constant, 96,485 Coulombs mol-1 E = cell potential, volts, V Thus the cell potential is equivalent to a measure of how much work can be done by the electrons flowing through the external circuit of the cell. It is strictly a THERMODYNAMIC measurement of the cell. Current – Rate of Reaction The current flowing through a cell can be directly related to the rate of the cell reaction. Thus measurement of the current enable the kinetics of the cell reaction to be studied. Rate = I/nF unit is , mol s-1 I = current, Amps, A n = number of electrons transferred in the cell reaction. F = Faraday’s constant, = 96485 coulombs mol-1 Standard State The standard state is defined as a temperature of 298 K and a pressure of 1 bar. Pure substances (solids, liquids and gases) should be in their normal state at this temperature and pressure. Solutions should have an activity* equal to one, which we will approximate here as a concentration equal to 1 mol L-1 The potential of a cell under standard conditions is denoted Eo. Hence we can find the standard Gibbs Free Energy change, and the equilibrium constant for the cell reaction. ΔGo = -nFEo = -RTlnK The concept of activity relates concentration to its effective thermodynamic equivalent. The Standard Hydrogen Electrode Since a cell is made from two half cells, it is useful to identify the contribution of each half cell to the cell potential. It is impossible to measure the potential of a single half cell, this is because every attempt to take a measurement using a voltmeter will introduce a wire (metal/solution interface) or another half cell. To overcome this problem we need a standard for comparison – the standard hydrogen electrode (SHE). H+ (aq) (1 mol L-1 ) І H2 (g) (1 bar) І Pt at 298o K Technically we should use the activity = 1, rather than concentration. You cannot measure the absolute potential of a half cell. You can only measure a potential difference between half cells or a change in potential with respect to a reference electrode The Standard Hydrogen Electrode Pt 2H+(s) + 2e ↔ H2(g) EE 0 red EH 2 E 0 RT ared ln nF aox H2 (half cell potential) RT a H 2 ln nF a H EH 2 aH RT 0 ln nF pH 2 p 0 EH 2 2.303RT RT 0 pH ln p H 2 p F 2F 1 2 The Standard Hydrogen Electrode Where : a H the activity of the hydrogen ions pH 2 the partial pressure of the hydrogen gas R the universal gas constant the temperatu re in Kelvin T F the Faraday constant (96,485.31) p the standard pressure 10 in Pa 0 5 Exchange Current Densities in 1 Molal H2SO4 Electrode Material -log10(A/cm2 Palladium 3.0 Platinum 3.1 Rhodium 3.6 Nickel 5.2 Gold 5.4 Tungsten 5.9 Niobium 6.8 Titantium 8.2 Cadmium 10.8 Manganese 10.9 Lead 12 Mercury 12.3 The Standard Half Cell Potential All other half cells can be compared to the SHE. A half cell in its standard state is connected as the cathode to the SHE connected as the anode. The measured potential is called the standard half cell potential, Eo. This connection is made regardless of which half cell may actually be anode or cathode, and will result in negative values for some half cells. The half cell reaction should always be shown as a standard reduction potential. Standard Half Cell Potential Eo can be related to the tendency of the half cell to reduce H+ (aq) (1 mol L-1 ) to H2 (g) (1 bar) The larger (more positive) the value of Eo, the more favorable that process The metal at the more negative potential is more easily oxidised or corroded متاكل. The metal at the more positive potential is more easily reduced. Standard Half Cell Potentials Consider the following half cell reduction reactions Cu2+(aq) + 2e → Cu(s) E0red = +0.340 V Zn2+(aq) + 2e → Zn(s) E0red = -0.763 V Therefore copper will be reduced and zinc oxidised Zn(s) + Cu2+(aq) → Zn2+(aq) + Cu(s) The voltage of the cell is:E0cell = 0.340 – (0.763) = 1.103V Standard Half Cell Potentials Concentration cells Fe → Fe2+ + 2e E red E 0 red Ered RT aRe d ln (half cell reduction potential) nF aOx 0.0592 1 0.44 log 2 Fe 2 An iron electrode in a solution of 10-2M Fe2+ will have a potential of -0.56 V and a similar electrode in 10-5M Fe2+ will have a potential of -0.74 volts. If the electrodes were connected the cell with the lower concentration of Fe2+ would corrode to produce more Fe2+ and the cell with a higher concentration of Fe2+ would undergo reduction to decrease the Fe2+ concentration. The reason the half cell reaction should be shown as a standard reduction potential is that the potential given will be the same as the potential measured with a voltmeter. A list of standard half cell reductions potentials is given to enable you to predict reactions that will occur. Half cell oxidation potentials are given in tables. For a particular half cell reaction the potential is the same but opposite in sign to the corresponding reduction potential. This is done for thermodynamic reasons. However, it causes confusion and since they are of no practical benefit they can be ignored. Non – Standard Half Cell Potentials This could be measured for any half cell not in its standard state, connected as the cathode to the SHE. We can calculate the non-standard half cell (equilibrium) potential using the Nernst Equation: RT EE ln Q nF 0 which is based on non - standard Free Energy G G0 RT ln Q Non – Standard Half Cell Potentials Where: E = non-standard half cell potential E0 = standard half cell potential n = number of electrons in standard reduction reaction Q = reaction quotient for standard reduction reaction. Q, the reaction quotient has the same appearance as the equilibrium constant, but does not necessarily relate to equilibrium conditions. Non – Standard Half Cell Potentials Non standard cell potential can then be calculated from the non standard half cell potentials: Ecell = Ecathode - Eanode Key Thermodynamic Quantity the entropy change Another key thermodynamic quantity, the entropy change, ΔS, can be determined from the variation of the cell potential with temperature. E S nF T Where: ΔS = Entropy change, J K-1 mol-1 n = number of electrons transferred in the cell reaction F = Faraday’s constant, 96485 C mol-1 Key Thermodynamic Quantity the enthalpy change After the entropy change is determined, the enthalpy change can be determined from the fundamental thermodynamic relationship ΔG = ΔH – TΔS Where: ΔG = Gibbs Free Energy change, J mol-1 ΔH = Enthalpy change, J mol-1 ΔS = Entropy change, J K-1 mol-1 It can also be noted that the equilibrium potential, E, gives the minimum free energy that will need to be supplied to an electrolytic cell to force the cell reaction. Standard Half Cell Potentials Consider the following half cell reduction reactions Cu2+(aq) + 2e → Cu(s) E0red = +0.340 V Zn2+(aq) + 2e → Zn(s) E0red = -0.763 V Therefore copper will be reduced and zinc oxidised Zn(s) + Cu2+(aq) → Zn2+(aq) + Cu(s) The voltage of the cell E0cell = 0.340 – (0.763) = 1.103V Galvanic Cell Cu/Cu2+ Zn/Zn2+ Cu Zn CuSO4 ZnCl2 Galvanic Cell Cu/Cu2+ Zn/Zn2+ Galvanic Cell Cu/Cu2+ Zn/Zn2+ Galvanic Cell Cu/Cu2+ Zn/Zn2+ Thermodynamic Properties of Ions in Solution Enthalpy and Gibbs Energy Enthalpy and Gibbs energy of formation Values of fHø and fGø refer to formation of ions from reference state of parent ions االيونات االصلية » Individual enthalpies and Gibbs energies for ions not directly measurable » Only measure overall reactions Since H and G state functions, the overall reaction is the sum of component reactions Could measure a number of reactions with similar components and by difference get fHø Need to know one fHø however Contributions can be seen by constructing a thermodynamic cycle » » » Sum around cycle is zero (G is state function) fGø of an ion includes contribution from dissociation, ionization and solvation of hydrogen All Gibbs energies except G of solvation estimated from standard tables fGø of two ions is related to solvGø fGø(Cl-, aq) = 1272 kJ mol-1 + solvGø(Cl-) + solvGø(H+) Can be estimated from Born equation Born Equation Solvation Gibbs Energies Solvation )الحلحلة(االذابهGibbs energy estimated from the electrical work required to transfer an ion to a solvent - Born Equation » Solvent treated as a dielectric with permittivity, eG » Good example of how work need not be PV work to calculate Gibbs energies z 2i e 2 N A s olvG 8e 0 ri 1 1 e G where z i charg e of ion ri radius of ion N A Avagodro' s number e 0 vacuum permitivity For water, Born equation becomes solGø = 6.86 x 104(zi2/ri) kJ mol-1 ri is radius in pm » Values turn out to be in reasonable agreement with experimental Ion Activities Definition The activity of a solution, a, is related to the chemical potential, µ µ = µø + RTln(a) Tend to associate activity with concentration (molality) Its related but not equivalent Replacement valid in very dilute solution (<10-3 mol/kg total ion concentration) Given a solution whose ions behave ideally with a molality, bø of 1 mol/kg a = g(b/bø) g is the activity coefficient Depends on composition, concentration (molality) and temperature g1 and a b/bø as b 0 From [1] µ = µø + RTln(b) + RTln(g) where b = b/bø » µ = µideal + RTln(g) µideal (= µø + RTln(b) ) is the chemical potential of an ideal dilute solution of molality bhere b = b/bø Mean Activity coefficients Consider a solution of two monovalenent cations (M+) and anions (X-) For ideal solution G ideal ideal ideal m For real solution G ideal ideal RT ln g ideal RT ln g m G ideal ideal ideal RT ln g RT ln g m G ideal ideal ideal RT ln g g m Deviation from ideality contained in term RTln(g+ g-) » Define (g+ -) = (g+ g-)0.5 (geometric mean) Reflects fact you can’t really separate deviation from non-ideality (g+ -) is the mean activity coefficient for monovalent ions Then, µ+ = µ+ideal + RTln(g+-) and µ- = µ-ideal + RTln(g+-) Generally for compound MpXq that dissolves into p cations and q anions, by same process define mean activity coefficient as (g+ -) = (g+ g-)1/s where s = p + q » The chemical potential, µi, becomes µi = µi ideal + RTln(g+-) And G becomes G = p µ+ + q µ Again non-ideality is shared Estimating (g+ -) Coulomb interactions imply oppositely charged ions attract each other In solutions, near an ion counter ions are found (ionic atmosphere) Coulomb potential drops as 1/r: i = Zi/r Zi a ionic charge G (& µ) of ion lowered by electrostatic interactions Since µi = µi ideal + RTln(g+-), lowering is associated with RTln(g+-) » - Debye-Hückel Theory ln(g+-) can be calculated by modeling these interactions Debye-Hückel Limiting Law (proof Justification 10.2): » zi is charged number on ions » » Must sum all ions in solution Sign of charge included, e.g, zNa+ = +1; zSO42- = -2 You’ll be using this in lab (Expt. 7, 9) Works well at dilute solutions (b < 1 mmol/kg) log g i z z AI 0.5 for water A 0.509 I is ionic strength (dim ensionless ) I 1 2 b z 2i b i 0.5 z z AI Extended Debye-Hückel Limiting Law (1 mmol/kg <b < 0.1 mol/kg): log g B dimensionless const., adjustable empirical parameter 1 BI 0.5 b>0.1 mol/kg (e.g. sea water): Model dependence of g of solvent on solute and use Gibbs-Duhem equation (SnJdµJ) = 0 to estimate g of solute Estimating (g+ -) - Debye-Hückel Theory Ionic Strength and Molality I = k (b/bø) k M+ M2+ M3+ M4+ X1 3 6 10 X23 4 15 12 X36 15 9 42 X410 12 42 16 Limiting Law vs. Ionic Strength Electrochemical Cells Electrochemical cell - two electrodes in contact with an electrolyte » Electrolyte is an ionic conductor (solution, liquid, or solid) » Electrode compartment = electrode + electrolyte If electrolytes are different compartments may be connect with salt bridge Electrolyte solution in agar Galvanic cell - an electrochemical cell that produces electricity Electrolytic cell - an electrochemical cell in which a nonspontaneous reaction is driven by an external source of current Types of Electrodes Metal/metal ion (a) » Designation:M(s)|M+(aq) » Redox couple: M+ /M » Half reaction: M+(aq) + 1e- M(s) Gas (b) » » » Metal/insoluble salt (c) » » » Designation*: Pt(s)|X2(g)|X+(aq) or Pt(s)|X2(g)|X-(aq) Redox couple: X+ /X2 or X2 / XHalf reaction: X+(aq) + 1e- 1/2X2(g) or 1/2X2(g) + 1e- X-(aq) Designation:M(s)|MX(s)|X-(aq) Redox couple: MX /M,XHalf reaction: MX(s) + 1e- M(s) + X-(aq) Redox (d) » » » Designation*: Pt(s)| M+(aq), M2+(aq) Redox couple: M+/M2+ Half reaction: M2+(aq) + 1e- M+(aq) *Inert metal (Pt) source or sink of e- Half-Reactions Recall definition of redox: » Redox reaction is one involving transfer of electrons OILRIG » Oxidation is loss of electrons Reduction is gain of electrons Reducing agent (reductant) is electron donor Oxidizing agent (oxidant) is electron acceptor Any redox reaction can be expressed as the difference of two reduction half reactions (sum of oxidation and reduction half reaction) Cu2+(aq) + 2e- Cu (s) Zn2+(aq) + 2e- Zn (s) (copper - zinc): Cu2+(aq) + Zn (s) Cu (s) + Zn2+(aq) Redox couples are the reduced and oxidizing species in a redox reaction » Written Ox/Red for half reaction Ox + ne- Red Example above: Cu2+/Cu; Zn2+/Zn Half Reactions Reaction quotient for half-reaction (Q) » Like reaction quotient for overall reaction (activity of product over activity reactant raised to appropriate power for stoichiometry) except electrons omitted Cu2+(aq) + 2e- Cu (s) Q = 1/aCu {Metal in standard state aM = 1} O2(g) + 4H+(aq) + 4e- 2H2O (l) aH O 1 pø pø Q 4 a 4 fO a H pO 4 fO 4 fO H a H ø a H ø p p O2 assumed to be ideal gas 2 2 2 2 Redox couples in an electrochemical cell separated in space » » Oxidation in one compartment, reduction in another Oxidation compartment » Red1 Ox1 + neElectrode at which this occurs is the cathode Reduction compartment Ox2 + ne- Red2 Electrode at which this occurs is the anode 2 Half Reactions Galvanic cell (produces electricity) » » » Cathode at higher potential than anode Species being reduced withdraws electrons from cathode giving it a relative (+) charge Species being oxidized deposits electrons in anode giving it a relative (-) charge Electrolytic cell(electricity supplied) » Oxidation still occurs at anode Galvanic Cell » Oxidation doesn’t occur spontaneously Electrons come from the species in that compartment Anode relatively positive to cathode Cathode Supply of electrons drives reduction Electrolytic Cell Types of Cells Commonest cell has single electrolyte in contact with both electrodes Daniel cell - electrode compartments separated » Different electrolyte in each compartment Electrolyte concentration cell - same electrolyte, different concentration Electrode concentration cell electrodes have different concentration » Daniel Cell Gas cells at different pressures Amalgams at different cocentrations Additional potential difference across interface of two electrolytes - liquid junction potential Present in electrolyte concentration cells Due to differing mobility of ions of different sizes across interface Can be reduced with salt bridge Potential is then independent of concentration of electrolyte solution Cell Reactions Notation - overall cell reaction denoted by cell diagram » » » Cell Reactions: reaction occurring in the cell with the right-hand as the cathode Zn(s) | ZnSO 4 (aq) || CuSO 4 (aq) | Cu(s) (spontaneous reduction) » Phase boundary denoted by single vertical line (|) Pt(s) | H 2 (g) | HCl(aq) | AgCl (s) | Ag Liquid junction denoted by single vertical dotted line (:) Zn(s) | ZnSO 4 (aq) CuSO4 (aq) | Cu Daniel cell Interface with no junction potential double verticla line (||) Pt(s) | H 2 (g) | HCl(aq, b1 ) || HCl(aq, b 2 ) | H 2 (g) | Pt(s) Salt bridge To write cell reaction: 2 1. Write r.h.s. as reduction Cu (aq) 2e Cu(s) 2 Zn (aq) 2e Zn(s) 2. Write l.h.s. as reduction 2 2 3. Subtract 2 from 1 Cu (aq) Zn Cu(s) Zn (aq) Cell Potential - electrical work that can be done through the transfer of electrons in a cell » » » Depends on the potential difference between electrodes If overall reaction at equilibrium cell potential is zero If reaction spontaneous, w is negative. At constant p and T we,max = G Work is maximum only if cell is operating reversibly G is related to composition, work is reversible @ constant composition, i.e., no current Under these conditions the potential difference is the electromotive force (emf) of the cell, E Cell Reactions: Relation between E and rG Assume cell rxn where concentration changes by d ( extent of rxn) @ const. T and p dG J dn J n J J d J J J For a reversible cell, the Gibbs energy of reaction, rG, is proportional to the cell potential, rG = -nFE But, G r G p,T n JJ where n is the number of electrons transferred and F is Faraday’s constant J so dG r Gd max imum non expansion electrical work, w e w e dG r Gd Proof [1] when this occurs nd electrons move from anode to cathode charg e transported (# e ) (charg e / mole e ) nd eN A But eN A Faraday' s cons tan t F so ch arg e transported nFd Electrical work charg e potential nFd E Substituting int o [1] nFd E r Gd or r G nFE » » When potential is high, rG is negative and cell reaction is spontaneous The emf (driving power of cell) is related to the extent of reaction Nernst Equation: Relationship of emf(electro motivation force) to Activity Recall that the Gibbs energy of reaction is related to composition: rG = rGø + RTlnQ where Q is reaction quotient(anJproducts/anJreactants) Since rG = -nFE E = -(rGø/nF) - (RT/nF)lnQ » Define -(rGø/nF) as Eø, the standard emf of the cell So, E = Eø - (RT/nF)lnQ » (Nernst Equation) Eø is the emf when all reactants and products are in their standard states » Nernst Equation indicates a plot of E vs. ln Q will have Slope = -(RT/nF) » aproducts = 1 and areactants = 1, so Q=1 and ln(Q) = 0 Intercept = Eø At 25°C, RT/F = 0.0257 mV, Nernst equation becomes E = Eø - (0.0257 V/nF)lnQ Nernst Equation: Concentration Cells M|M+(aq, L)|| M+(aq, R)|M In above cell the only difference is the concentration of electrolyte in each cell » » Left cell - molality is L; right cell - molality is R Cell reaction: M+(aq, R) M+(aq,L) n is 1 Eø is 0 because when R=L the two compartments are identical and no driving force Nernst Equation: E = Eø - (RT/nF)lnQ » In this case: E = - (RT/F)ln(aL/aR) = - (RT/F)ln(bL/bR) If R>L, ln(bL/bR)<0, E>0, concentration will be lowered by reduction in right compartment If L>R, ln(bL/bR)>0, E<0, concentration will be lowered by reduction in left compartment This has biological application - nerve firing involves change in permeability of cell membrane to Na+ This changes nerve cell potential. Nernst Equation: Equilibrium Cells At equilibrium, by definition no work can be done » » E=0 Concentrations are fixed by the equilibrium constant(K) K=Q Nernst Equation: E = Eø - (RT/nF)lnQ » » In this case: E = 0 so Eø = (RT/nF)lnQ = (RT/nF)lnK Rearranging, lnK = Eø/ (RT/nF) = nFEø/ RT or K = exp(nFEø/ RT) This means cell potentials can be used to determine equilibrium constants Standard Potentials Since you can’t measure the potential of a single electrode, one pair has been assigned, by convention a potential of 0 » Standard hydrogen electrode (SHE): Pt(s) | H2 (g) | H (aq) ø E 0 Other potentials determined by constructing cells in which SHE is left hand electrode: » Silver Chloride|Silver Pt(s)|H2(g)|H+(aq)||Cl-(aq)|AgCl(s)|Ag Eø(AgCl, Ag, Cl-)=+0.22V Reaction: AgCl(s) + 1/2H2(g) Ag(s) + H+(aq) + Cl-(aq) Because all potentials are relative to the hydrogen electrode, the reaction is listed without the contribution of the SHE, AgCl(s) Ag(s) + Cl-(aq) Numerical factors » If std emf reaction is multiplied by numerical factor, rG increases by that factor » Standard potential does not increase! Recall Eø = -(rGø/nF) If rGø(new) = n x rGø, n(new) = n x n Eø (new) = -(rGø(new) / n(new) F) =-(n x rGø /n n(new) F)= -(rGø/nF) = Eø Cell emf & Standard Potentials Cell emf of any cell can be calculated from table of standard potentials emf of cell is just difference in standard potential Sc(s)|Sc3+(aq)||Al3+(aq)|Al(s) Procedure: » » 1) Write new cell diagram 2) Eø = Eø(right) - Eø(left) » Al3+(aq) + 3e- Al(s) Eø = 1.69 V Sc3+(aq) + 3e- Sc(s) Eø = -2.09 V Al3+(aq) + Sc(s) Sc3+(aq) +Al Eø = 1.69 V - (-2.09 V) = 3.78V Recall: Eø = -(rGø/nF) If Eø > 0, rGø < 0 and K>1 Example above, at 25°C, K = exp(nFEø/ RT) = exp (3 x 3.78V/0.0257V) = exp(441) = 4.27 x 10191 K = [Sc3+]/[Al3+] Measuring Standard Potentials Harned Cell Pt(s) | H 2 (g) | HCl(aq) | AgCl(s) | Ag(s) reaction : 1 H 2 (g) AgCl(s) HCl(aq) Ag(s) 2 From Nernst Equation E = E°(AgCl/Ag,Cl-) - (RT/F)ln Q E = E°- (RT/F)ln ((aH+ aCl-)/(fH2/pØ)0.5 = E°- (RT/F){ln (aH+ aCl-) -ln(fH2/pØ)0.5 } Let fH2= pØ. E = E°- (RT/F)ln (aH+ aCl-) But a =bg ± and bH+= bCl-) so E = E°- (RT/F)ln (b2g ± ) = E°- (RT/F)ln (b2) - (RT/F)ln (g = E°- (2RT/F)ln(b) - (2RT/F)ln(g ±) ± 2) Debye-Hückel Limiting Law log(g ±) aI0.5 so log(g ±) ab0.5 or ln(g ±) ab0.5 » E = E°- (2RT/F)ln(b) + Cb0.5 or E + (2RT/F)ln(b) = E° + Cb0.5 » This means a plot of {E + (2RT/F)ln(b)} vs. b0.5 has Eø as intercept Measuring activity coefficients » Since E = E°- (2RT/F)ln(b) - (2RT/F)ln(g ±) , ln(g ±) = {(Eø - E)/(2RT/F)}- ln(b) Knowing Eø and measuring E at known molality allows you to calculate activity coefficient Applications of Standard Potential Electrochemical series Because Eø = -(rGø/nF), if Eø > 0, rGø < 0 » » » Since Eø = Eø2 - Eø1 , the reaction is spontaneous as written Red1 has tendency to reduce Ox2 ,More Reducing if Eø1 <Eø2 More directly in the electromotive series elements arranged such that low on the chart reduces high Calcium reduces platinum (Eø = 4.05 V) Platinum reduces gold (Eø = 0.51) Tin reduced lead (Eø = 0.011 V) Sodium reduces magnesium (Eø = 0.34 V) Element Gold Chlorine Platinum Pall adium Sil ver Copper Copper Iron Lead Tin Nickel Cobalt Cadmium Iron Zinc Manganes e Alumi num Magnes ium Sodium Calcium Potassium Reaction Au + e- Au Cl2(g) + 2 e- 2 ClPt2+ + 2 e- Pt Pd2+ + 2 e- Pd Ag + + e- Ag Cu+ + e - Cu Cu2+ + 2 e- Cu Fe3+ + 3 e- Fe Pb2+ + 2 e- Pb Sn2+ + 2 e- Sn Ni2+ + 2 e- Ni Co2+ + 2 e- Co Cd2+ + 2 e- Cd Fe2+ + 2 e- Fe Zn2+ + 2 e- Zn Mn2+ + 2 e- Mn Al3+ + 3 e- Al Mg2+ + 2 e- Mg Na+ + e- Na Ca2+ + 2 e- Ca K+ + e- K + Eæ(V) 1.692 1.35827 1.18 0.951 0.7996 0.521 0.3419 -0.037 -0.1262 -0.1375 -0.257 -0.28 -0.403 -0.447 -0.7618 -1.185 -1.662 -2.372 -2.71 -2.868 -2.931 More Oxidzing pH and pKa Glass Electrode H (aq) 1e 2 aH E = Eø - (RT/nF) lnQ Converting ln to log (ln =2.303log), E = (RT/F) 2.303log(aH+) Define pH=-logaH so E = -2.303(RT/F)pH At 25°C, E= -59.16mVpH Measurement » Direct method: hydrogen electrode + saturated calomel reference electrode (Hg 2Cl2) » At 25°C, pH = (E + E(calomel))/ (-59.16mV ) Indirect method: Replace hydrogen electrode with glass electrode sensitive to hydrogen activity (but not permeable to H+ E(glass) a pH, E(glass) = 0 when pH = 7 pKA » 0.5 If fH2= pø, Q = 1/aH+ and E = (RT/F) ln(aH+) Q pø For hydrogen electrode (1/2 reaction above), Eø = 0 » 1 H (g) 2 2 fH Since we learned pH = pKa when concentration of acid and conjugate base are equal pKa can be measured directly from pH measurement Ion-Selective electrodes - related to glass electrode except potentials sensitive to other species Electrochemical Cells and Thermodynamic Functions Since the standard emf of a cell is related to the Gibbs energy, electrochemical measurements can be used to obtain other thermodynamic functions » » Complementary to calorimetric measurements Esp. useful for ions in solutions (aqueous, molten salts, etc.) Starting point: rGø = -nFEø and thermodynamic relationships we saw earlier » » » rGø can be used to calculate Eø directly (or reverse) Entropy (S) Thermodynamic relationship: (∂G/∂T)p =-S rGø = -nFEø At constant p, (dGø/dT) =-nF(dEø/dT) -S =-nF(dEø/dT) or (dEø/dT) =S/nF Enthalpy Thermodynamic relationship: rHø = rGø + T rSø rHø = -nFEø + T(nF(dEø/dT)) rHø =-nF(Eø - TdEø/dT)