punk0rz
New Member
hi im new - just a quick question.
ive look through text books and havent been able to clarify this
what is the purpose of a salt bridge in a galvanic cell?
i know it completes the circuit, but how does it do this? my assumption is:
as electrons leave the anode (oxidising the anode, leaving + ions of the terminal material in solution) and travel to the cathode end (reducing the ions in solution on the cathode end, precipitating them out), more electrons are present in the solution on the cathode end and less at the anode end then there were originally - the ions in the salt bridge even this out by drifting to either side, hence the same ammount of electrons are present either side of the cell as when the reaction began
and since electrons are taken from the anode, negative charge is replaced by anions from the salt bridge and vise versa for cathode?
am i close?? its late and im tired so ive probably messed something up but is that the general idea? im going to bed
ive look through text books and havent been able to clarify this
what is the purpose of a salt bridge in a galvanic cell?
i know it completes the circuit, but how does it do this? my assumption is:
as electrons leave the anode (oxidising the anode, leaving + ions of the terminal material in solution) and travel to the cathode end (reducing the ions in solution on the cathode end, precipitating them out), more electrons are present in the solution on the cathode end and less at the anode end then there were originally - the ions in the salt bridge even this out by drifting to either side, hence the same ammount of electrons are present either side of the cell as when the reaction began
and since electrons are taken from the anode, negative charge is replaced by anions from the salt bridge and vise versa for cathode?
am i close?? its late and im tired so ive probably messed something up but is that the general idea? im going to bed