1 / 8

Ch 17: Instrumental Methods in Electrochemistry

Ch 17: Instrumental Methods in Electrochemistry. Principle parts of a personal glucose monitor (covered in the section on Amperometry). The following chapter material is taken from your text and another textbook by Harris:

scot
Download Presentation

Ch 17: Instrumental Methods in Electrochemistry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ch 17: Instrumental Methods in Electrochemistry Principle parts of a personal glucose monitor (covered in the section on Amperometry) The following chapter material is taken from your text and another textbook by Harris: Daniel C. Harris, "Quantitative Analysis, 7th ed", Chapter 17, p. 349-357 You have been given a copy of the reading from this additional reference.

  2. - + Fundamentals of Electrolysis Electrolysis is the process in which electrical energy is used to cause a nonspontaneous chemical reaction to occur by "pumping" electrons into the cathode. 2 Na+ + 2 Cl-→ 2 Na(l) + Cl2(g) Eo = - 4.075 +4.075 is the minimum voltage that must be applied to the cathode to reduce Na+

  3. Cathode: Cu2+ + 2e- = Cu(s) Anode: H2O = ½ O2(g) + 2 H+ + 2e- Net: H2O + Cu2+ = Cu(s) + ½ O2(g) + 2 H+ Current (I) is measured in Coulombs second Coulombs = Coulombs x seconds second q = I x t Conversion between moles e- and Coulombs is Faraday's constant: 1 mole e- 96,500 C Harris, 7th ed

  4. Electrolysis and Mass Changes Harris, 7th ed Example (p. 350, Harris 7th ed): If a current of 0.17 A flows for 16 min through the cell in Figure 17-1, how many grams of Cu(s) will be deposited?

  5. Electrogravimetric Analysis Harris, 4th ed Practical application of electrolysis: reduce a metal at the cathode, and weigh the mass of the cathode before and after the reaction. Cu2+(aq) + 2e-→ Cu(s) deposited on cathode (Pt gauze)

  6. Coulometry or Coulometric Titration Harris, 7th ed titrant generated at the anode from Br- analyte • Like electrolysis since both "pump" electrons into the cathode to cause reduction there. • The solution initially contains Br-. At the anode (oxidation) the Br2 is generated by oxidation of Br- • 2 Br-→ Br2 + 2e- • As soon as Br2 is produced, it reacts with the C6H10 • When all the C6H10 is consumed, the excess Br2 generated at the anode signals the end of the titration (solution turns orange-brown and the detector electrodes voltage reaches a maximum) • The moles of C6H10 are calculated from the current and the time to the endpoint.

  7. Harris, 7th ed Br2 generated here by oxidation of Br- C6H10 reduced here to trans-1,2-dibromocyclohexane

  8. Harris, 7th ed Example (p. 356, Harris 7th ed): A 2.000 mL volume containing 0.6113 mg of cyclohexene/mL is to be titrated in Figure 17-8. With a current of 4.852 mA, how much time is required for complete titration?

More Related