Science, asked by kanitamaryam123, 3 months ago

In electrolytic reduction of alumina ……………is used as a cathode.​

Answers

Answered by AryanSaka
2

Answer:

Explanation:

When it is melted the Al3+ and O2- ions are free to move and conduct electricity. Electrolysis of the alumina/cryolite solution gives aluminium at the cathode and oxygen at the anode. 4Al3+ + 12e- → 4Al (aluminium metal at the (-)cathode) reduction.

Answered by psbaria555
0

Explanation:

Extraction of Aluminium - Electrolysis Cell.

The steel container is coated with carbon (graphite) and this is used as the negative electrode (cathode).

Aluminium oxide (Al2O3) is an ionic compound.

When it is melted the Al3+ and O2- ions are free to move and conduct electricity.

Electrolysis of the alumina/cryolite solution gives aluminium at the cathode and oxygen at the anode.

4Al3+ + 12e- → 4Al (aluminium metal at the (-)cathode) reduction.

6O2- - 12e- → 3O2 (oxygen gas at the (+)anode) oxidation.

Aluminium is more dense than the alumina/cryolite solution and so it falls to the bottom of the cell where it can be tapped off as pure liquid metal.

The overall reaction is

aluminium oxide → aluminium + oxygen.

2Al2O3(l) → 4Al(l) + 3O2(g)

Oxygen is given off at the positive carbon anode.

Carbon dioxide is also given off at the carbon anode because hot oxygen reacts with the carbon anode to form carbon dioxide gas.

carbon + oxygen →carbon dioxide.

C(s) + O2(g) → CO2(g)

The carbon anodes slowly disappear because each molecule of carbon dioxide which is given off takes a little piece of carbon away with it.

The carbon anodes need to be replaced when they become too small.

Similar questions