C6 - Electrolysis Flashcards

1
Q

When can ionic compounds carry charge and what are they known as

A
  • When they are molten or aqueous
  • This is because their ions can move and conduct electricity
  • This substance is now known as the electrolytes
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2
Q

What are the electrodes made of

A
  • A conducting metal or graphite
  • These are inert (unreactive) so they don’t interfere with the electrolysis
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3
Q

What are the two different electrodes

A
  • Negative electrode (cathode)
  • Positive electrode (anode)
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4
Q

What happens at the positive electrode

A
  • Negative ions travel to the anode
  • They discharge by losing electrons (oxidation) and froming an element
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5
Q

What happens at the negative electrode

A
  • Positive ions go to the cathode
  • They discharge by gaining electrons (reduction) and forming an element
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6
Q

How is aluminium extracted from aluminium oxide using electrolysis

A
  • Aluminium oxide is mixed with cryolite to lower the melting point which saves money
  • Electrodes are made of graphite
  • Mixture is then heated until it is molten
  • Aluminium is produced at cathode and is then removed
  • Oxygen is produced at the anode
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7
Q

Why is carbon(graphite) used as the electrodes in aluminium oxide electrolysis

A
  • Cheap
  • Good conductor
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8
Q

Why does the anode need to be replaced often

A
  • The anode is made from graphite (carbon)
  • The carbon reacts with the oxygen made here during electrolysis to form CO2 (due to high temps)
  • This slowly wears the anode away so needs to be repaced frequently
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9
Q

Half equation at the cathode in the electrolysis of aluminium oxide

A

Al3+ + 3e- —> Al

The aluminium is reduced (gains electrons)

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10
Q

Half equation at the anode in the electrolysis of aluminium oxide

A

2O2- —> O₂ + 4e-

Oxygen is oxidised (loses electrons)

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11
Q

Why is electrolysis expenisve

A
  • lots of energy required to melt the ionic compound
  • lots of energy is needed to produced the electric current
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12
Q

What reaction happens to water molecules during electrolysis

A
  • They ionise forming hydroxide ions and hydrogen ions
  • H₂O ⇌ H+ + OH-
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13
Q

Rule for products at the cathode of the electrolysis of an aqueous solution

A
  • Hydrogen is produced at the cathode if the metal is more reactive than hydrogen
  • This is because the more reactive ion stays in the compound
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14
Q

Rule for products at the anode of the electrolysis of an aqueous solution

A
  • If the solution contains halide ions, the halogen will be produced at the electrode
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15
Q

Required pratical for the electrolysis of copper (II) chloride solution

A
  • Set up beaker with 50cm3 of the solution
  • Add a petri dish with 2 holes and put graphite electrodes in them
  • Attach them to a power pakc and make sure they don’t touch
  • Once it is turned on, the cathode will be coated in copper
  • The anode will have bubbles of chlorine around it and this can be proved as it turns damp blue litmus paper white
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16
Q

Required pratical for the electrolysis of sodium chloride solution

A
  • Same set up as before
  • At the anode, there are bubbles of chlorine as it is a halogen
  • At the cathode, there are bubbles of hydrogen
17
Q

Possible half equations at the cathode for the electrolysis of aqueous solutions

A
  • 2H+ (aq) + 2e- —> H₂ (g)
18
Q

Possible half equations at the anode for the electrolysis of aqueous solutions

A
  • 4OH- (aq) —> O₂(g) + 2H₂O(l) +4e-
  • (If chlorine is used) - 2Cl- (aq) —> Cl₂(g) +2e-
19
Q

another name for positive ions and negative ions

A

Positive ions - cations
Negative ions - anions

20
Q

Full balanced equation for the breakdown of aluminium oxide by electrolysis

A
  • Aluminium oxide —> aluminium + oxygen
  • 2Al₂ O3 (l) —> 4Al (l) + 3O₂
21
Q

Explain the purpose of cryolite

A
  • Al₂O3 must be molten to be electrolysed
  • Cryolite reduces the melting point of the mixture
  • This means less energy is required to melt it so reduces the costs