Hi I'm a bit stuck with this galvanic cells question:
Background:
There's an inert platinum for the anode and a copper cathode. Hydrogen gas is being pumped (or something) into the solution where the anode is, so that it oxidises and becomes H+ ions in solution. Meanwhile, at the cathode, Cu(II) ions are reducing and being deposited onto the copper cathode.
The question asks how the pH levels of each solution change when current is flowing...And this is where I need help...
Also, I'm a bit confused about the nature of pH levels as well. I know it's the concentrations of OH- and H+ but like when current is flowing through these solutions, do the concentrations change because of the presence of electrons flowing in the solutions? Or do there actually have to be OH and H+ ions involved in the redox reaction for us to see changes in the pH levels?
Thanks in advance!
pH is a measure of acidity. pH = -log
10[H
3O+], So (at 25º) a pH of 1 is very acidic- high concentration of H+ / H3O+ ions (H+ and H3O+ are interchangeable), pH of 7 is neutral, and pH of 14 is basic.
So pH doesn't depend on electrons at all, only the concentration of H+ (you can also find it using the concentration of OH- at 25ºC). So the pH only changes when the concentration of either OH- or H+ ions are produced / used up. So yes, there have to be OH- and H+ ions involved in the redox reaction to see changes in the pH levels
1. In exothermic reactions, is the energy in the bonds of the reactants>energy of product bonds? In checkpoints, it says that the products have a stronger bond, does that mean that a stronger bond has less energy?
2. When asked to write thermochemical equations and are given a heat of combustion, do we write the equation with the coefficient of the fuel being 1 and the coefficient of oxygen being a fraction? Or do we write it as all having non fractional coefficients?
3. when ur rounding with sigfigs, do u take the molar mass into consideration if it has the smallest amount or do you round only according to the sigfigs in the question?
1. Yes, the energy in bonds of reactants > energy of products. The products have a stronger bond but it's not that important to know, but when they have a stronger bond they have less energy and are more stable, and it takes more energy to release the bonds.
2. Usually you use whole numbers, but sometimes equations use the coefficient of the fuel being 1 and others being fractions. I'd always use whole numbers and change the ∆H accordingly.
3. Yes you take molar mass into consideration, usually it's to 1 decimal place, so usually it's to 3 sometimes 4 sig figs. I usually round according to sig figs in each step (I use the numbers in the calculator for the rest of the problem - only round what I write down)