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Slide 1 of 54 20-5 Batteries: Producing Electricity Through Chemical Reactions Primary Cells (or batteries). Cell reaction is not reversible. Secondary Cells. Cell reaction can be reversed by passing electricity through the cell (charging). Flow Batteries and Fuel Cells. Materials pass through the battery which converts chemical energy to electric energy.

20-5 Batteries: Producing Electricity Through Chemical Reactions

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20-5 Batteries: Producing Electricity Through Chemical Reactions. Primary Cells (or batteries). Cell reaction is not reversible. Secondary Cells. Cell reaction can be reversed by passing electricity through the cell (charging). Flow Batteries and Fuel Cells. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: 20-5 Batteries: Producing Electricity Through Chemical Reactions

Slide 1 of 54

20-5 Batteries: Producing Electricity Through Chemical Reactions

Primary Cells (or batteries). Cell reaction is not reversible.

Secondary Cells. Cell reaction can be reversed by passing electricity

through the cell (charging).

Flow Batteries and Fuel Cells. Materials pass through the battery which converts

chemical energy to electric energy.

Page 2: 20-5 Batteries: Producing Electricity Through Chemical Reactions

Slide 2 of 54

The Leclanché (Dry) Cell

Page 3: 20-5 Batteries: Producing Electricity Through Chemical Reactions

Slide 3 of 54

Dry Cell

Zn(s) → Zn2+(aq) + 2 e-Oxidation:

2 MnO2(s) + H2O(l) + 2 e- → Mn2O3(s) + 2 OH-Reduction:

NH4+ + OH- → NH3(g) + H2O(l) Acid-base reaction:

NH3 + Zn2+(aq) + Cl- → [Zn(NH3)2]Cl2(s)Precipitation reaction:

Page 4: 20-5 Batteries: Producing Electricity Through Chemical Reactions

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Alkaline Dry Cell

Zn2+(aq) + 2 OH- → Zn (OH)2(s)

Zn(s) → Zn2+(aq) + 2 e-

Oxidation reaction can be thought of in two steps:

2 MnO2(s) + H2O(l) + 2 e- → Mn2O3(s) + 2 OH-Reduction:

Zn (s) + 2 OH- → Zn (OH)2(s) + 2 e-

Page 5: 20-5 Batteries: Producing Electricity Through Chemical Reactions

Slide 5 of 54

Lead-Acid (Storage) Battery

The most common secondary battery.

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Lead-Acid Battery

PbO2(s) + 3 H+(aq) + HSO4-(aq) + 2 e- → PbSO4(s) + 2 H2O(l)

Oxidation:

Reduction:

Pb (s) + HSO4-(aq) → PbSO4(s) + H+(aq) + 2 e-

PbO2(s) + Pb(s) + 2 H+(aq) + HSO4-(aq) → 2 PbSO4(s) + 2 H2O(l)

E°cell = E°PbO2/PbSO4 - E°PbSO4/Pb = 1.74 V – (-0.28 V) = 2.02 V

Page 7: 20-5 Batteries: Producing Electricity Through Chemical Reactions

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The Silver-Zinc Cell: A Button Battery

Zn(s),ZnO(s)|KOH(sat’d)|Ag2O(s),Ag(s)

Zn(s) + Ag2O(s) → ZnO(s) + 2 Ag(s) Ecell = 1.8 V

Page 8: 20-5 Batteries: Producing Electricity Through Chemical Reactions

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The Nickel-Cadmium Cell

Cd(s) + 2 NiO(OH)(s) + 2 H2O(L) → 2 Ni(OH)2(s) + Cd(OH)2(s)

Page 9: 20-5 Batteries: Producing Electricity Through Chemical Reactions

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20-7 Electrolysis: Causing Non-spontaneous Reactions to Occur

Galvanic Cell:

Zn(s) + Cu2+(aq) → Zn2+(aq) + Cu(s) EO2/OH- = 1.103 V

Electolytic Cell:

Zn2+(aq) + Cu(s) → Zn(s) + Cu2+(aq) EO2/OH- = -1.103 V

Page 10: 20-5 Batteries: Producing Electricity Through Chemical Reactions

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Predicting Electrolysis Reaction

An Electrolytic Cell e- is the reverse of the

voltaic cell. Battery must have a

voltage in excess of 1.103 V in order to force the non-spontaneous reaction.

Page 11: 20-5 Batteries: Producing Electricity Through Chemical Reactions

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Complications in Electrolytic Cells

Overpotential. Competing reactions. Non-standard states. Nature of electrodes.

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Quantitative Aspects of Electrolysis

1 mol e- = 96485 C

Charge (C) = current (C/s) time (s)

ne- = I t

F