Just wondering, why for electrolysis, the anode is positive and the cathode is negative.
What conditions determine the "charge" of the electrodes?
Omg haven't been on this thread for a long time!
@Anonymiza:
So essentially , the anode is positive because the it is giving up electrons to the positive cathode of the galvanic cell . The way how I remember these concepts is that "+" always attracts with "+". So the positive terminal of the galvanic cell is attracted to the anode , thus the anode has to be positive.
On the other hand, as the cathode is inputting electrons , thus becoming negatively charged. Thus, the anode of the galvanic cell is negative as well. Remember "-" and "-" attract.
I hope that helps !
Erm...last time I checked...positive charges attract negative charges. I don't see how your logic works there. For a galvanic cell, the positive electrode is the site of reduction, i.e. where the electrons are headed.
Don't think of them as "positive" and "negative" electrodes. Think of them as electrodes with higher and lower electric potential, so the positive electrode has higher electric potential. Generally, positive charges move from higher to lower electric potential spontaneously; negatives do the opposite. Makes sense; electrons leave the negative terminal of the battery to go to the positive. So, negative electrode = electrode at lower potential. ETC.
The way I think about it is like this. To create an electrolytic cell, you need to meet two requirements.
1. Voltage of the power source is higher than the voltage of the galvanic cell that would otherwise be created.
2. Positive terminal of battery (assuming we have a battery) is connected to the positive electrode, negative terminal connected to negative electrode.
So what happens? Let's assume that initially the positive electrode of the battery and the positive terminal were connected first. Therefore they are at the same potential. Then, we connect the negative terminal to the negative electrode. As the potential drop across the battery is larger than the potential difference from the positive electrode to the negative by definition, the negative terminal of the battery is actually at a lower potential than the negative electrode. Therefore, electrons flow from the negative terminal to the negative electrode, i.e. the negative electrode is the cathode.
Now, as the voltage across the battery is constant, electrons are drawn from the positive electrode to the positive terminal of the battery to replace the electrons lost at the negative terminal. This way, a current flows where the electrons come from the positive electrode and go to the negative.
Alternatively, if the negative terminal is connected first to the negative electrode, when the positives are connected, the positive terminal of the battery is at higher potential than the positive electrode as the battery's voltage is bigger than the cell's voltage. This means the electrons will flow from the positive electrode to the positive battery terminal. Et cetera.
This is what the books really mean by "external power sources drive a non-spontaneous reaction". You get a larger power source to override the potential difference.