Category: 02. Cell Potential and Thermodynamics

  • Standard Potentials

    For convenience, values of standard potentials have been determined and tabulated for a large number of electrochemical reactions, a subset of which is found in Appendix A. Although listed as half-cell reactions, the potentials represent the difference between the potential of the reaction of interest and a reference reaction. The universal reference is the standard hydrogen…

  • Expression for Cell Potential

    Note that Equation 2.3 relates the Gibbs energy to the cell potential, U, which is the difference between the potential of the two electrodes. From a practical standpoint, that potential will be positive if you measure it one way, and negative if you switch the wires and measure it again. The fact that the potential can be measured…

  • Cell Potential

    At open circuit, no current flows between the electrodes. Furthermore, for our thermodynamic analysis, each electrode half-cell reaction is at equilibrium (no net anodic or cathodic reaction occurs at either electrode). Under these conditions, it is appropriate to write the half-cell reactions as reversible reactions. Since electrons are participants in each of the two reactions, the…

  • Electrochemical Reactions

    An electrochemical reaction is a reaction where the transfer of electrons from a species being oxidized to a species undergoing reduction takes place through an electronic conductor. Typically, that conductor is a metal. Because the electron transfer takes place through a conductor rather than directly between the reacting species, we can separate the two electron-transfer…