kloudsurfer said:
Hey,
Could someone please help me with these questions?
Why does the volume of electrolyte in the half cell affect the current but does not significantly alter the voltage produced by the cell?
When I did the experiment it was the other way around!! Anyway, i dont fully undestand what current and voltage are, so that doesnt help. Would anyone be able to explain it to me? Also,
Why does the current output of the cell decrease steadily with time? Does it have to do with the ions from one half cell moving across the salt bridge and 'contaminating' the solution in the other half cell?
1)
Remember Le Chatelier ? A system would shift to maintain equlibrium ? Shoving in more reactants will make the reaction produce more products to even out.
Let's use Magnesium and Silver as an example.
Working it out, the redox reaction is Mg
(s) + 2Ag
+ --> Mg
2+ + 2Ag
(s) ...
Oh as from my experiment with the magnesium ans silver half-cells, the magnesium electrode will dissolve into magnesium ions and the silver electrode will expand and the ion solution will be depleted.
"Contamination" does not occur, if you refill more magnesium ions in the magnesium half-cell there will be a "fresh" supply of current.
Current (and similarly voltage) can be affected if the two solutions:
Are more or less than ONE MOLE.
Operate at more or less than SLC (Standard Laboratory Conditions, 25 degrees Celsius and 1 atmosphere).
Have dirty electrodes .
2)
"i dont fully undestand what current and voltage" - it's statements like these that make me wanna say I WISH YOU DID PHYSICS. But I'll be happy to try to explain to you.
Current is the actual flow of electrons in a circuit, the unit is Amps
Resistance is how much electrons can be prevented from flowing is the the unit is Ohms
High current kills you, not the voltage (unless the resistance is low enough)
It's the volts that jolts but its the mils that kills.
What a nice problem to solve ?
Use the formula V=IR
Note:
100mA current is enough to kill you even if your skin is dry.
20mA is enough to shock you silly, just less than 10mA is noticeable.
Theres two uninsulated cables, A has resistance of 1000 Ohm and B has resistance of 55000 Ohms. Both are 5000 Volts, sounds dangerous ? Which one ?
If you touch cable A:
I = V/R = (5000/1000) = 5A
That's 50 times more than enough to kill you.
If you touch cable B:
I = V/R = (5000/55000) = 0.09A=9mA
You could feel some tingling, won't kill you.
As you can see, both voltages of 5000V sounds dangerous, but it's the low resistance of cable A that has a high current to kill you.