NCERT Chemistry Class 12 - Chapter 3: Electrochemistry - Notes

वैद्युतरसायन

Learning Objectives

  • Understand electrochemical cells and electrode potentials
  • Apply the Nernst equation and predict spontaneity
  • Study electrolysis and Faraday's laws
  • Learn about conductance, molar conductivity, and Kohlrausch's law
  • Understand batteries, fuel cells, and corrosion

Key Concepts

Electrochemical Cells

Galvanic (Voltaic) cell: Converts chemical energy to electrical energy. Spontaneous reaction (ΔG < 0).

Oxidation at anode (negative terminal); Reduction at cathode (positive terminal).

Cell notation: Anode | Anode solution || Cathode solution | Cathode. Example: Zn(s)|Zn²⁺(aq)||Cu²⁺(aq)|Cu(s).

EMF (Cell potential): E°_cell = E°_cathode - E°_anode

If E°_cell > 0: reaction is spontaneous.

Standard Electrode Potential

Measured against Standard Hydrogen Electrode (SHE), E° = 0.00 V.

Higher E° → stronger oxidising agent (greater tendency to be reduced).

Electrochemical series: arranged in increasing order of E°.

Nernst Equation

E_cell = E°_cell - (RT/nF) ln Q = E°_cell - (0.0591/n) log Q (at 25°C)

At equilibrium: E_cell = 0, so E°_cell = (0.0591/n) log K.

Relation to Gibbs energy: ΔG° = -nFE°_cell = -2.303 RT log K.

F = 96485 C/mol (Faraday constant).

Conductance and Conductivity

Conductance (G): G = 1/R = κ × A/l. SI unit: siemens (S).

Conductivity (κ): κ = 1/ρ = G × l/A = G × cell constant. SI unit: S/m.

Molar conductivity: Λ_m = κ/c (S·cm²/mol, where c in mol/cm³) or Λ_m = 1000κ/M (M in mol/L).

On dilution: κ decreases (fewer ions per volume), but Λ_m increases (less interionic interaction).

Kohlrausch's Law

Λ°_m = ν₊λ°₊ + ν₋λ°₋ (limiting molar conductivity is sum of individual ion conductivities).

Applications: Calculate Λ°_m of weak electrolytes, determine degree of dissociation α = Λ_m/Λ°_m, find solubility of sparingly soluble salts.

Electrolysis and Faraday's Laws

Electrolytic cell: Uses electrical energy to drive non-spontaneous reactions. Anode (+), Cathode (-).

Faraday's First Law: m = ZIt = (MIt)/(nF), where Z = electrochemical equivalent, M = molar mass, n = number of electrons.

Faraday's Second Law: When same quantity of electricity passes through different electrolytes, masses deposited are proportional to their equivalent weights.

1 Faraday = 96485 C = charge to deposit 1 mole of monovalent ion.

Batteries and Fuel Cells

Primary (non-rechargeable): Dry cell (Zn-MnO₂, 1.5V), Mercury cell (Zn-HgO, 1.35V).

Secondary (rechargeable): Lead-acid (Pb-PbO₂, 2V per cell, 6 cells = 12V), Ni-Cd battery.

Fuel cell: H₂-O₂ fuel cell: 2H₂ + O₂ → 2H₂O. High efficiency (~70%), pollution-free.

Corrosion

Electrochemical degradation of metals. Iron rusting: Fe → Fe²⁺ + 2e⁻ (anode); O₂ + 2H₂O + 4e⁻ → 4OH⁻ (cathode).

Prevention: galvanising, painting, cathodic protection (sacrificial anode), alloying.

Summary

Electrochemistry connects chemical reactions with electrical energy. Galvanic cells produce electricity from spontaneous reactions. The Nernst equation gives cell potential under non-standard conditions. Conductivity and molar conductivity describe ionic conduction. Faraday's laws quantify electrolysis. Batteries store chemical energy; fuel cells convert it efficiently. Corrosion is an electrochemical process that can be prevented.

Important Terms

  • EMF: Maximum potential difference between electrodes
  • Nernst Equation: E = E° - (0.0591/n) log Q at 25°C
  • Faraday Constant: F = 96485 C/mol
  • Molar Conductivity: Conductivity per unit concentration
  • Kohlrausch's Law: Λ°_m = sum of individual ionic conductivities
  • Corrosion: Electrochemical destruction of metal

Quick Revision

  • E°_cell = E°_cathode - E°_anode; ΔG° = -nFE°
  • Nernst: E = E° - (0.0591/n) log Q
  • At equilibrium: E = 0; E° = (0.0591/n) log K
  • Faraday: m = MIt/(nF); 1F = 96485 C
  • Kohlrausch: Λ°_m = ν₊λ°₊ + ν₋λ°₋
  • Galvanic: anode(-), cathode(+); Electrolytic: anode(+), cathode(-)
NCERT Chemistry Class 12 - Chapter 3: Electrochemistry - Notes | EduMunch