Electrolysis Flashcards

(31 cards)

1
Q

define electricity

A

flow of electrons/charge

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2
Q

what is a conductor?

A

a solid material which allows charge to flow through it

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3
Q

what is an insulator?

A

a material which does not allow charge to flow through it

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4
Q

how do metals like iron and non metals like graphite allow charge to flow through them?

A

they have free delocalised electrons not used in bonding

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5
Q

why do non metals such as diamond and sulfur not allow charge to flow through them?

A

all electrons are used in bonding, so cannot flow

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6
Q

what is an electrolyte?

A

an ionic compound in the molten state or dissolved in water

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7
Q

what is electrolysis?

A

the process of a liquid (electrolyte) conducting electricity, bringing about a chemical change in the electrolyte

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8
Q

what types of compound can electrolysis be carried out on?

A

ionic

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9
Q

can ionic compounds conduct electricity while solid and why?

A

no, because there are no free ions or electrons

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10
Q

can ionic compounds conduct electricity while molten/dissolved and why?

A

yes, because charged ions are free to move around

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11
Q

the electrode connected to the negative terminal will be _____ charged

A

negatively

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12
Q

the electrode connected to the positive terminal will be _____ charged

A

positively

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13
Q

the negative electrode is called the…

A

cathode

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14
Q

the positive electrode is called the…

A

anode

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15
Q

positively charged ions are called?

A

cations

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16
Q

positively charged cations are attracted to what?

17
Q

negatively charged ions are called?

18
Q

negatively charged anions are attracted to what?

19
Q

what type of reaction happens at the cathode?

20
Q

what type of reaction happens at the anode?

21
Q

why is the cathode negative?

A

it has a surplus of electrons

22
Q

why is the anode positive?

A

it has a deficit of electrons

23
Q

what happens to the positive ion of a molten ionic compound during electrolysis?

A
  • molten makes it free to move
  • attracted to cathode as opposite charges attract
  • take electrons from the cathode to form an atom (is reduced)
24
Q

what happens to the negative ion of a molten ionic compound during electrolysis?

A
  • molten makes it free to move
  • attracted to anode as opposite charges attract
  • donate electrons to the cathode to form an atom (is oxidised)
25
how is aluminium extracted?
- mined as Al₂O₃ in bauxite - mixed with cryolite to dissolve the Al₂O₃ instead of melting it, as it has a high mp, which would require lots of energy - current is passed through to separate Al from O² (describe electrolysis)
26
what is different about electrolysis in a solution from electrolysis in molten state?
- because H+ and OH- ions are also present from the water, they compete for which ions will be oxidised/reduced
27
what determines which ion is produced at the cathode during electrolysis of a solution?
- both positive ion from ionic compound and H+ ion from water present - If H+ is below the metal in the reactivity series, H+ is reduced - If H+ is above the metal in the reactivity series (Ag, Cu), then the metal ion is reduced
28
what determines which ion is produced at the anode during electrolysis of a solution?
- both negative ion from ionic compound and OH- ion from water present - If the ion from the ionic compound is a halide (Cl-, Br- etc) then they are oxidised and the OH- stays in the solution - If the ion from the ionic compound isn't a halide (SO₄²-, NO₃- etc) then they stay in solution and the OH- is oxidised
29
Balanced half equation for reduction of H+ at the cathode?
2H+ +2e- -> H²
30
Balanced half equation for oxidation of OH- at the anode?
4OH- -> 2H₂O + O₂ + 4e-
31
in the electrolysis of sulfuric acid, will more H₂ or O₂ be produced and why?
- More H₂, as H+ only requires one electron transfer to form into an atom, or 2 to form a diatomic molecule - Whereas O²- requires 2 electron transfers to form into an atom, or 4 to produce a diatomic molecule - Meaning it'll be produced at half the rate of H₂