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Posted

I know this is basic stuff, but does the electrolysis of water produce oxygen and hydrogen, or hydrogen and OH-. Or are they the same thing?

Posted
YT2095 said in post # :

it produces 2 parts Hydrogen and 1 part Oxygen :)

 

so therefore it would produce oxygen and hydrogen gas right?

  • 4 months later...
Posted
can anyone explain why the water turns yellow after electroylsis?? :confused:

 

If there was any sulfuric acid in the water it would tend to turn yellow when the acid decomposed.

Posted

well, you probably used sodium chloride as electrolyde to made water a conductor. So, when you electrolyse the water, sodium ions comes together with the two electrolites, paper clips for example. The actual substance which turns the water yellow is cloride ions.

Posted

Yellow color is probably due of iron or nickel ions that go into solution from those paper clips. In fact you can completely dissolve your anode this way.

Posted

does anyone know why the water turn green when i do electrolysis with sodium chloride solution? is it chlorine? by the way whats produced when i do electrolysis to sodium chloride solution? i know one is hydrogen gas, but whats the other?

  • 1 month later...
Posted

As I understand, the chemical equation of electrolysis is:

 

2 H2O -> O2 + 2 H2

 

and 4 OH- -> O2 + 2 H2O + 4e- at the anode.

 

My question is, are the 4 electrons taken back up by the anode or do they float freely? Is heat created by the reaction?

Posted
well, you probably used sodium chloride as electrolyde to made water a conductor. So, when you electrolyse the water, sodium ions comes together with the two electrolites, paper clips for example. The actual substance which turns the water yellow is cloride ions.

 

 

Halogen ions are 100% completely colorless. They do not, and cannot, produce any color. So I think you mean aqueous elemental chlorine. ;):D

 

When you electrolyze a solution of NaCl, you produce sodium hydroxide, hydrogen gas, chlorine gas, and teency, tiny amount of oxygen gas.

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