Chemistry, asked by HareRamSharma4980, 1 year ago

Would Magnesium Chloride work in a salt bridge?

Answers

Answered by riza28
1
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Answered by aniket1454
2
I am conducting an experiment involving an anode and cathode and I need to connect the two via a salt bridge. However, I am measuring ammonia/ammonium production in one of my half cells using an ion selective electrode, meaning that any of the following would cause interference:

Cs+,K+,Tl+,H+,Ag+,Tris+,Li+,Na+, Ammonia/Ammonium

(Tris = Tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane)

The only possible option that I have found that may work in a salt bridge that does not involve any of the above ions is MgCl2, which would split into Mg2+ and 2Cl− to maintain the charge balance between the two half cells.

And yes Magnesium Chloride will work in a salt bridge.
Hope this will help you ....✌
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