For the following electrochemical cell Sn(s)|Sn2 (aq, 0.0155 M)||Ag (aq, 3.50 M)|Ag(s) write the net cell equation. Phases are optional. Do not include the concentrations. Calculate the following values at 25.0 °C using standard potentials as needed
The Correct Answer and Explanation is :
Electrochemical Cell: Sn(s) | Sn²⁺(aq) || Ag⁺(aq) | Ag(s)
Step 1: Write Half-Cell Reactions
For the Sn electrode (oxidation half-reaction):
[
\text{Sn(s)} \rightarrow \text{Sn}^{2+}(aq) + 2e^-
]
For the Ag electrode (reduction half-reaction):
[
\text{Ag}^+(aq) + e^- \rightarrow \text{Ag(s)}
]
Step 2: Determine the Standard Reduction Potentials
From standard tables:
- Sn²⁺/Sn: ( E^\circ = -0.14 \, \text{V} ) (for reduction)
- Ag⁺/Ag: ( E^\circ = +0.80 \, \text{V} ) (for reduction)
Since oxidation occurs at the anode and reduction at the cathode, the half-reaction at the anode involves the oxidation of Sn, and at the cathode, Ag⁺ is reduced to Ag.
Step 3: Calculate the Cell Potential (( E^\circ_{\text{cell}} ))
The standard cell potential is calculated using:
[
E^\circ_{\text{cell}} = E^\circ_{\text{cathode}} – E^\circ_{\text{anode}}
]
Substituting values:
[
E^\circ_{\text{cell}} = 0.80 \, \text{V} – (-0.14 \, \text{V}) = 0.80 \, \text{V} + 0.14 \, \text{V} = 0.94 \, \text{V}
]
Thus, the standard cell potential is ( 0.94 \, \text{V} ).
Step 4: Calculate the Nernst Equation
Since the concentrations of ions in the cell are non-standard, we need to use the Nernst equation to calculate the actual cell potential at the given conditions:
[
E = E^\circ_{\text{cell}} – \frac{0.0592}{n} \log Q
]
Where:
- ( n = 2 ) (the number of electrons transferred),
- ( Q ) is the reaction quotient, which is given by:
[
Q = \frac{[\text{Sn}^{2+}]{\text{cathode}}}{[\text{Ag}^+]{\text{anode}}}
]
From the problem:
- ( [\text{Sn}^{2+}]_{\text{cathode}} = 0.0155 \, \text{M} ),
- ( [\text{Ag}^+]_{\text{anode}} = 3.50 \, \text{M} ).
Thus:
[
Q = \frac{0.0155}{3.50} = 0.00443
]
Now, we can calculate ( E ):
[
E = 0.94 \, \text{V} – \frac{0.0592}{2} \log(0.00443)
]
[
E = 0.94 \, \text{V} – \frac{0.0592}{2} (-2.653)
]
[
E = 0.94 \, \text{V} + 0.0786 \, \text{V}
]
[
E = 1.0186 \, \text{V}
]
So, the actual cell potential is ( E = 1.02 \, \text{V} ) at 25°C.
Step 5: Write the Net Cell Reaction
The overall cell reaction is the sum of the half-reactions:
- Anode (oxidation): ( \text{Sn(s)} \rightarrow \text{Sn}^{2+}(aq) + 2e^- )
- Cathode (reduction): ( \text{Ag}^+(aq) + e^- \rightarrow \text{Ag(s)} )
To balance the number of electrons, multiply the reduction half-reaction by 2:
[
\text{2Ag}^+(aq) + 2e^- \rightarrow \text{2Ag(s)}
]
Thus, the net reaction is:
[
\text{Sn(s)} + 2\text{Ag}^+(aq) \rightarrow \text{Sn}^{2+}(aq) + 2\text{Ag(s)}
]
Conclusion
The overall cell reaction for the given electrochemical cell is:
[
\text{Sn(s)} + 2\text{Ag}^+(aq) \rightarrow \text{Sn}^{2+}(aq) + 2\text{Ag(s)}
]
The standard cell potential is ( 0.94 \, \text{V} ), and the actual cell potential, calculated using the Nernst equation, is ( 1.02 \, \text{V} ) at 25°C.