Definition and Basic Concepts

Electrolysis Defined

Electrolysis: process of chemical decomposition induced by electric current. Converts electrical energy into chemical change. Applied to ionic substances in molten or aqueous state.

Historical Background

Discovered by Michael Faraday (1834). Basis for electrochemistry development. Enabled quantitative relationship between electricity and chemical change.

Scope and Significance

Used in metal extraction, purification, chemical synthesis, energy storage. Fundamental to electrochemical industry and analytical methods.

"Electrolysis is the cornerstone of modern electrochemistry, linking electricity with chemical transformation." -- John B. Goodenough

Electrolysis Mechanism

Redox Reactions at Electrodes

Oxidation at anode: electron loss. Reduction at cathode: electron gain. Overall reaction: decomposition of electrolyte species.

Ion Migration and Charge Transfer

Positive ions (cations) migrate to cathode. Negative ions (anions) to anode. Electron flow through external circuit completes circuit.

Energy Input and Activation

External voltage overcomes decomposition potential. Activation energy required to initiate ion discharge at electrodes.

Electrolytic Cell Components

Anode and Cathode

Anode: positive electrode, site of oxidation. Cathode: negative electrode, site of reduction. Material selection affects reaction products.

Electrolyte

Conductive medium containing ions. Molten salts or aqueous solutions. Determines species available for discharge.

Power Source and Circuit

DC power supply provides driving voltage. Circuit includes electrodes and electrolyte to enable current flow.

Electrode Reactions

Cathodic Reactions

Reduction of cations or water species. Examples: M⁺ + e⁻ → M (metal deposition), 2H₂O + 2e⁻ → H₂ + 2OH⁻.

Anodic Reactions

Oxidation of anions or solvent. Examples: 2Cl⁻ → Cl₂ + 2e⁻, 4OH⁻ → O₂ + 2H₂O + 4e⁻.

Factors Affecting Electrode Reactions

Electrode material, overpotential, concentration, temperature, competing reactions influence product distribution.

Faraday's Laws of Electrolysis

First Law

Mass of substance liberated at electrode is proportional to total electric charge passed.

Second Law

Masses of different substances liberated by same charge are proportional to their equivalent weights.

Mathematical Expression

m = (Q × M) / (n × F)where:m = mass deposited (g)Q = total charge (Coulombs)M = molar mass (g/mol)n = number of electrons exchangedF = Faraday constant (96485 C/mol) 

Role of Electrolytes

Types of Electrolytes

Molten salts, aqueous solutions, ionic liquids. Must dissociate into ions for conduction.

Conductivity and Ion Mobility

Higher ion concentration increases conductivity. Ion mobility affected by viscosity, temperature.

Electrolyte Decomposition

Electrolyte may undergo secondary reactions. Stability important for selective electrolysis.

Industrial Applications

Metal Extraction

Electrolysis used for extraction of Al, Na, Mg from ores or molten salts.

Chlor-alkali Process

Electrolysis of brine produces Cl₂, H₂, NaOH. Fundamental to chemical industry.

Hydrogen Production

Water electrolysis provides clean hydrogen fuel. Key for energy transition technologies.

Electroplating and Refining

Electroplating Principles

Deposition of metal layer on substrate by cathodic reduction. Enhances corrosion resistance, aesthetics.

Electrorefining

Purification of metals by selective electrodeposition. Removes impurities from crude metal anodes.

Factors Affecting Quality

Current density, electrolyte composition, temperature, agitation control deposit uniformity.

Quantitative Aspects

Current Efficiency

Ratio of actual to theoretical mass deposited. Losses due to side reactions or incomplete deposition.

Electrochemical Equivalent

Mass of substance deposited per unit charge. Used for process optimization.

Calculation Examples

Calculate mass of Cu deposited by 5 A current for 30 min.Given: M(Cu) = 63.5 g/mol, n = 2Q = I × t = 5 × (30 × 60) = 9000 Cm = (Q × M) / (n × F) = (9000 × 63.5) / (2 × 96485) ≈ 2.96 g 

Electrolysis of Water

Reaction Overview

2H₂O(l) → 2H₂(g) + O₂(g). Requires voltage > 1.23 V theoretical, practical voltage higher due to overpotentials.

Electrode Reactions

Cathode: 2H₂O + 2e⁻ → H₂ + 2OH⁻. Anode: 4OH⁻ → O₂ + 2H₂O + 4e⁻.

Efficiency and Challenges

Energy intensive. Catalysts used to reduce overpotential. Gas collection and separation critical.

ParameterValue
Standard Electrode Potential (E°)-0.83 V (cathode), +0.40 V (anode)
Overall Cell Potential1.23 V (theoretical)
Practical Voltage~1.8 – 2.0 V (due to overpotentials)

Energy and Thermodynamics

Gibbs Free Energy

ΔG° = -nFE°. Electrolysis requires ΔG > 0 (non-spontaneous).

Energy Efficiency

Efficiency limited by overpotential, resistive losses, side reactions. Optimization critical for industrial viability.

Thermodynamic Limits

Minimum voltage determined by Gibbs free energy change. Excess voltage used to drive kinetics.

Safety and Environmental Concerns

Hazardous Gas Generation

Hydrogen and chlorine gases are flammable or toxic. Proper ventilation and gas management mandatory.

Electrical Hazards

High currents and voltages require insulation, grounding, and protective equipment.

Waste and Byproducts

Electrolyte disposal, metal sludge, and chemical byproducts must be managed to prevent pollution.

References

  • Faraday, M., "Experimental Researches in Electricity," Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond., vol. 124, 1834, pp. 1-21.
  • Bard, A. J., Faulkner, L. R., "Electrochemical Methods: Fundamentals and Applications," Wiley, 2nd ed., 2001.
  • Schlesinger, M. E., King, J. J., "Extractive Metallurgy of Nickel, Cobalt and Platinum Group Metals," Elsevier, 2011.
  • Hamann, C. H., Hamnett, A., Vielstich, W., "Electrochemistry," Wiley-VCH, 3rd ed., 2007.
  • Trasatti, S., "Electrocatalysis: Understanding the Success and Failure of Catalysts," J. Electroanal. Chem., vol. 327, 1992, pp. 353–365.