In a galvanic cell, what is the role of a salt bridge?
In a galvanic cell, what is the role of a salt bridge?
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1 Answer
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A salt bridge in a galvanic cell maintains electrical neutrality by allowing the ions to flow between the two half-cells. It ensures the continuous flow without participating in the reaction. The salt bridge prevents the charges accumulation as such an accumulation can halt the electrochemical reaction by stopping the flow of electrons.
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n = 3
t = 3 * 1580
= 4740 years
The following are the real-world applications of electrochemistry - military applications such as thermal batteries, digital watches, hearing aids, digital cameras, electrical appliances such as cellphones, and torches.
It depends on students. Though it is not a tough chapter to study but for students who have misconceptions and those who struggle with visualization can find it challenging.
There are two types of electrochemical cells - Electrolytic and Galvanic or Voltaic cells. The electrolytic cells need an external source such as AC power source or DC battery and it involve non-spontaneous reactions. The galvanic cells gets its energy from redox reactions which is spontaneous.
Redox reactions is the basic principle of the electrochemistry. The redox reactions is the process where electrons are transferred between substances. In this process chemical energy gets converted into electrical energy and vice versa.
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