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🧪 Electrolysis of Aqueous Solutions

Spec 5.4.3.4 📗 Foundation
📖 In-Depth Theory

Why Aqueous Solutions Are More Complex

When an ionic compound is DISSOLVED in water, the solution contains:
Ions from the ionic compound, AND
H⁺ and OH⁻ ions from water (water partially ionises: H₂O ⇌ H⁺ + OH⁻).
At each electrode, there are COMPETING IONS — more than one type of ion that could be discharged.
The ion that is actually discharged depends on:
1. POSITION IN THE REACTIVITY SERIES — less reactive ions are discharged preferentially.
2. CONCENTRATION — a high concentration of an ion favours its discharge.
At the CATHODE (reduction):
If the metal is BELOW hydrogen in the series → metal is deposited.
If the metal is ABOVE hydrogen in the series → hydrogen gas (H₂) is produced (from H⁺ ions).
At the ANODE (oxidation):
If Cl⁻ ions are present in HIGH concentration → chlorine gas (Cl₂) produced.
If no Cl⁻ (or low concentration) → oxygen gas (O₂) produced (from OH⁻ ions from water).

Electrolysis of Key Aqueous Solutions

DILUTE SULFURIC ACID (H₂SO₄(aq)) with inert electrodes:
Ions: H⁺, OH⁻, SO₄²⁻.
Cathode: H⁺ + e⁻ → H₂ (hydrogen produced — SO₄²⁻ not discharged, too stable)
Anode: 4OH⁻ → O₂ + 2H₂O (oxygen produced)
Ratio: 2 volumes H₂ for every 1 volume O₂ (2:1 ratio)
CUPROUS SULFATE SOLUTION (CuSO₄(aq)) with inert electrodes:
Ions: Cu²⁺, SO₄²⁻, H⁺, OH⁻.
Cathode: Cu²⁺ preferred over H⁺ (copper is below hydrogen, less reactive) → copper deposited.
Anode: OH⁻ discharged → oxygen gas.
CONCENTRATED SODIUM CHLORIDE (brine: NaCl(aq)) with inert electrodes:
Ions: Na⁺, Cl⁻, H⁺, OH⁻.
Cathode: H⁺ preferred over Na⁺ (Na is far above hydrogen, very reactive) → hydrogen gas produced.
Anode: Cl⁻ in high concentration → CHLORINE gas produced (not O₂ — Cl⁻ concentration effect).
Remaining solution: Na⁺ and OH⁻ → sodium hydroxide (NaOH) — important industrial product.
This is the CHLOR-ALKALI process — produces chlorine, hydrogen and sodium hydroxide — all valuable chemicals.

Products Summary and Rules

CATHODE RULE (what's produced at the negative electrode):
Metal ions below hydrogen in series (Cu²⁺, Ag⁺, Au³⁺) → METAL deposited.
Metal ions above hydrogen in series (Na⁺, K⁺, Ca²⁺, Mg²⁺, Al³⁺, Zn²⁺, Fe²⁺) → HYDROGEN gas (H₂) produced.
ANODE RULE (what's produced at the positive electrode):
If halide ions present (Cl⁻, Br⁻, I⁻) AND in high concentration → HALOGEN gas (Cl₂, Br₂, I₂).
Otherwise → OXYGEN gas (O₂) from OH⁻ ions in water.
IMPORTANT INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS from electrolysis:
CHLORINE — from brine (NaCl solution). Used in PVC, disinfectants, bleach.
HYDROGEN — from brine. Used in Haber process, fuel cells.
SODIUM HYDROXIDE — from brine. Used in paper making, soap, cleaning products.
ALUMINIUM — from molten Al₂O₃ in cryolite.
OXYGEN — from water/dilute sulfuric acid.
⚠️ Common Mistake

In aqueous solutions, WATER provides H⁺ and OH⁻ ions that compete with the ions from the dissolved salt. At the cathode: metals above hydrogen → H₂ is produced (not the metal). At the anode: if no halide ions present → O₂ is produced (from OH⁻). Students often predict the wrong product for Na⁺ at the cathode — sodium is so reactive it is NEVER deposited from aqueous solution; hydrogen is produced instead.

📐 Key Equations
Cathode: 2H⁺ + 2e⁻ → H₂ (hydrogen from water/dilute acid)
Anode: 4OH⁻ → O₂ + 2H₂O + 4e⁻ (oxygen from water)
Anode: 2Cl⁻ → Cl₂ + 2e⁻ (chlorine from brine)
Cathode: Cu²⁺ + 2e⁻ → Cu (copper from CuSO₄)
📌 Key Note

Aqueous solutions: ions from salt AND H⁺/OH⁻ from water compete. Cathode: metal below H → metal deposited; metal above H → H₂. Anode: Cl⁻ in high conc → Cl₂; otherwise → O₂. Brine (NaCl) → H₂ (cathode) + Cl₂ (anode) + NaOH (solution) — chlor-alkali process.

🎯 Matching Activity — Predict the Electrolysis Products

Match each aqueous solution to its products at cathode and anode. — drag the symbols on the right to match the component names on the left.

Dilute H₂SO₄
Drop here
CuSO₄ solution
Drop here
Concentrated NaCl (brine)
Drop here
Dilute NaCl
Drop here
Cathode: H₂ gas. Anode: O₂ gas. (No metal ions below H, no halide ions)
Cathode: H₂ gas. Anode: O₂ gas. (Na above H; low Cl⁻ conc → O₂ preferred)
Cathode: H₂ gas. Anode: Cl₂ gas. (Na above H; high Cl⁻ conc)
Cathode: Cu metal deposited. Anode: O₂ gas. (Cu below H; no halide)
🧪 Required Practical

🔬 RP4 (Chemistry) — Investigate the electrolysis of aqueous solutions. Test products: H₂ with lit splint (squeaky pop), O₂ with glowing splint (relights), Cl₂ with damp litmus (bleaches it).

Know the method, variables, equipment and how to analyse results.

🎯 Test Yourself
Question 1 of 2
1. Copper sulfate solution is electrolysed with inert electrodes. What is produced at the cathode?
2. Concentrated brine (sodium chloride solution) is electrolysed. What is produced at the anode?
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