Could anyone help me out on this problem please? This is question 29 in Shipwrecks and salvage in the 2002 paper, but electrolysis appears in the production of materials topic, so I posted this here.
Calculate the voltage required to operate the cell shown as an electrolytic cell, showing relevant half equations in your working.
The diagram is just an iron electrode on the left and a copper electrode on the right, with all the usual things in a electrolytic cell (salt bridge, elctrolyte etc)
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In a galvanic cell, the iron would be the anode, and the copper elctrode would be the cathode, correct? Shouldn't an electrolytic cell be exactly the reverse? Ie. Iron the cathode, and copper the anode?
Yet the answers say that the iron remains the anode.... what the hell!?!?!
Any help would be much much much appreciated! Many thanks in advance!
Calculate the voltage required to operate the cell shown as an electrolytic cell, showing relevant half equations in your working.
The diagram is just an iron electrode on the left and a copper electrode on the right, with all the usual things in a electrolytic cell (salt bridge, elctrolyte etc)
**
In a galvanic cell, the iron would be the anode, and the copper elctrode would be the cathode, correct? Shouldn't an electrolytic cell be exactly the reverse? Ie. Iron the cathode, and copper the anode?
Yet the answers say that the iron remains the anode.... what the hell!?!?!
Any help would be much much much appreciated! Many thanks in advance!