Q21.107P

Question

A professor adds  to water to facilitate its electrolysis in a lecture demonstration. 

(a) What is the purpose of the Na2SO4

(b)Why is the water electrolyzed instead of the salt?

Step-by-Step Solution

Verified
Answer

a) To improve conductivity and speed up the electrolysis reaction,   is utilized.

b) Due to its lower reduction potential, water is more easily electrolyzed than other ions in the solution.

1Step 1: Definition

It's an electrochemical process that involves passing a current between two electrodes through an ionized solution (the electrolyte) to deposit positive ions (anions) on the negative electrode (cathode) and negative ions (cations) on the positive electrode (cathode) (anode).

2Step 2: Determining the purpose

(a)

To boost the water conductivity in this scenario, sodium sulfate is utilized.

Pure water is said to contain only H+ and OH- ions in low concentrations -10-7M at pH 7 , limiting its conductivity. More ions would be present in the solution as more salt was added, and the current would more quickly travel through the water to complete the circuit, resulting in much quicker electrolysis.

3Step 3: Determining the water electrolyzed instead of the salt

(b)

In the case of Na2SO4 addition to water, several reactions are plausible.

For oxidation (on the anode), the following reactions are considered:

- oxidation of water to O2:

2H2O(l)O2(g)+4H+(aq)+4e-Eox,H2O=-(1.40 V)(withovervoltage)

- oxidation of SO42-  ions is not possible because S  is in their maximum oxidation state +6 already, so they cannot be further oxidized.

The oxidation with the less positive (more negative) electrode potential happens in aqueous solution with mixed salts. Therefore, the oxidation of water to O2 gas and H3O+ ions is expected on anode.

Consider the following reduction processes on the cathode:

4Step 3: Determining the water electrolyzed

- reduction of water to H2 :

2H2O(l)+2e-H2(g)+2OH-(aq)Ered,H2O=-1.00 V(withovervoltage)

- reduction of Na+ ions to Na:

Na+(aq)+e-Na(s)Ered,,K+=-2.71 V

The reduction with the less negative (more positive) electrode potential happens in an aqueous solution containing mixed salts. On the cathode, water is predicted to be reduced to H2 gas and (hydroxide) ions.

Overall, the water is still more readily electrolyzed with the addition of  Na2SO4 owing to the half-reaction potentials difference, as seen above. As a result, the anode reaction produces O2 gas and H3O+ ions from water, whereas the cathode reaction produces H2 gas and OH- ions from water.