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Posted

Ok so when I pass electricty through salt water the negative ions move from highly negative area to positive area causing a current? My question is why do the move? Let's say there was Sodium and Chloride ions in water. Can't the chloride ion give an electron to sodium and make the whole solution deionized, why do they choose to move instead?

 

Thank you :)

Posted

Sodium has one excess electron (as a group 1 metal) whereas chlorine is missing one electron (as a halogen). Atoms are much more stable when they have a full (or empty) shell of electrons. Furthermore, in water, ions are surrounded by a group of water molecules. The water molecules are polar and help to stabilize the ions.

 

Basically, in water the atoms have lower energy when they are ionized so they become ionized.

Posted
Sodium has one excess electron (as a group 1 metal) whereas chlorine is missing one electron (as a halogen). Atoms are much more stable when they have a full (or empty) shell of electrons. Furthermore, in water, ions are surrounded by a group of water molecules. The water molecules are polar and help to stabilize the ions.

 

Basically, in water the atoms have lower energy when they are ionized so they become ionized.

 

Thanks for the help Skeptic :) I can understand why they would stay as ionized now, but I have a question about the reaction that occur in the cathode and anode. I can understand how reduction reaction can occur in the catode because they supply electrons at that end, but in the anode what make the ion lose its electrons thanks :)

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

The answer of this question is very simple. Salt and water are an ionic substance so they posses both negative and positive ions. Also salty water is a very good electrolyte. Hence electricity conducted through salt water.

Posted

since electricity is the movement of electrons,

 

when one has excessive electrons they can lose in continuous exchange, which is electricity ...

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