Physics, asked by bhanu18, 1 year ago

explanation of the diagram of electrolytic cell

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Answered by Manishkumarkeshri
2
Using chemical reactions to produce electricity is now a priority for many researchers. Being able to adequately use chemical reactions as a source of power would greatly help our environmental pollution problems. In this section of electrochemistry, we will be learning how to use chemical reactions to produce this clean electricity and even use electricity to generate chemical reactions. In order to induce a flow of electric charges, we place a strip of metal (the electrode) in a solution containing the same metal, which is in aqueous state. The combination of an electrode and its solution is called a half cell. Within the half cell, metals ions from the solution could gain electrons from the electrode and become metal atoms;or the metal atoms from the electrode could lose electrons and become metals ions in the solution.
Introduction
We use two different half cells to measure how readily electrons can flow from one electrode to another, and the device used for measurement is called a voltmeter. The voltmeter measures the cell potential, denoted by Ecell, (in units of Volts, 1V=1J/C), which is the potential difference between two half cells. The salt bridge allows the ions to flow from one half cell to another but prevents the flow of solutions.

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