The most important concepts you'll have to understand for these two topics:
In
galvanic cells,
spontaneous redox reactions occur. As you might recall, a redox reaction is one in which
electrons are transferred from one species to another, so they
produce electricity. The species that
loses electrons is
oxidised. The species that
gains electrons is
reduced.
And we can also say that that the species that loses electrons is the
reductant, as it causes the reduction of the other species. And in the same way, the species that gains electrons is the
oxidant, as it causes the oxidation of the other species. (This is kind of counter-intuitive, but you'll get the hang of it.)
You can tell whether a species is oxidised/reduced and hence whether it is the oxidant/reductant in the reaction by using oxidation numbers. You should know how to do this from Unit 3.
In a galvanic cell,
reduction occurs at the
cathode, which is the
positively-charged electrode.
Oxidation occurs at the
anode, which is the
negatively-charged electrode. (Though you'll have to see that these electrodes have no charge to begin with - their charge comes from the reaction itself.)
So:
reductant - is oxidised at the anode - loses electrons
oxidant - is reduced at the cathode - gains electrons
This, now, is where your
electrochemical series comes in. It is a list of redox half-equations, arranged such that the
oxidant is on the
left-hand side, and the
reductant is on the
right-hand side. These half-equations are ordered so that
strength of oxidants increases as you go up the table, and
strength of reductants increases as you go down the table.
This order was established by measuring the
electrical potential (potential to produce electricity when coupled with another half-cell) of each reaction against a
standard hydrogen electrode (SHE). This is a
half-cell (meaning that it only uses one half-equation) that is used as a reference point. We say that it produces 0.00 V of electricity. This electrical potential (
EMF) comes out as the
E0 value you can see on the right of the series.
You can predict whether a spontaneous reaction will occur by finding the oxidant and finding the reductant and seeing whether you can connect them with a line that goes from
top left, to bottom right. If this can be done, then that means that the E
0 value (EMF) of the cell is
positive and thus a redox reaction is possible.
So if you want the full steps to figure out what overall equation occurs and how to figure out EMF:
1. Identify which species is being oxidised and which is being reduced.
2. Find their positions on the electrochemical series.
3. Write out the two half-equations in descending order of EMF.
4. Reverse the equation with the lowest EMF (so that the reductant goes to its oxidised form).
5. Balance out the electrons (by multiplying the equations so that they end up having the same number of electrons).
6. Put the two half-equations together (the electrons should now cancel out).
7. Calculate EMF value using this formula:
EMF = E
0oxidant - E
0reductantFor example:
A galvanic cell using zinc metal and copper(II) ions
Cu2+(aq) + 2e
- --> Cu(s) E
0 = +0.34 V
Zn
2+(aq) + 2e
- -->
Zn(s) E
0 = -0.76 V
The ones in bold are the species that are reacting. You can see that they are in order of descending EMF, and that they can be connected by a diagonal line with a negative gradient. It follows that Zn is the reductant and is being oxidised, and that Cu
2+ is the oxidant and is being reduced.
Now to reverse the second equation:
Zn(s) --> Zn
2+(aq) + 2e
-And put the two half-equations together (the electrons are already balanced):
Cu2+(aq) +
Zn(s) --> Cu(s) + Zn
2+(aq)
And finally, to calculate EMF:
EMF = E
0oxidant - E
0reductant = (+0.34) - (-0.76)
= 1.10 V
If you consider what this particular galvanic cell would look like:

You might notice the little
e- (electrons) with an arrow pointing to the direction in which they are moving. They are moving through what is referred to as the
external circuit, which is the wires connecting the anode and cathode. In this particular diagram, the anode is to the left, and the cathode is on the right. The anode is made out of zinc, which is oxidised to zinc(II) ions in the course of the reaction. The cathode is made out of copper - the copper(II) ions are reduced to copper metal, which builds up on this cathode.
So where do the Zn
2+ ions go, and where do the Cu
2+ ions come from? The Cu
2+ ions come from a Cu(NO
3)
2(aq) solution placed in the right beaker, and the Zn
2+ ions that are produced go to a Zn(NO
3)
2 solution placed in the left beaker. (The species are deliberately separated from each other).
However, the galvanic cell cannot operate as of yet, because there is nothing connecting the two beakers of solution. In comes the
salt bridge, which is either a piece of filter paper soaked with or a glass tube filled with the
electrolyte. This is another solution, whose job it is to
supply ions to the reaction. In this case, it is a sodium nitrate solution. Sodium nitrate dissociates in water to produce Na
+ ions and NO
3- ions.
As the Cu
2+ ions are used up, there is a build-up of negative charge in the right beaker. So the Na
+ ions are sent in from the salt bridge in order to balance this. And in the other beaker, as Zn
2+ ions are produced, there is a build-up of positive charge. The NO
3- ions come in from the salt bridge to correct this.
In this way, the electrolyte in the salt bridge maintains
electroneutrality in the cell, meaning that there is no net build-up of charge in either of the beakers. It also completes what is known as the
internal circuit, which is the part of the cell
through which ions flow.