Pass current through water, collect hydrogen at the cathode and oxygen at the anode, and verify the 2:1 H₂:O₂ volume ratio. Adjust voltage, electrolyte, and electrode material — all governed by Faraday's Laws.
| Sl. | Electrolyte | Electrodes | V (V) | I (A) | t (s) | H₂ (mL) | O₂ (mL) | Ratio | Energy (J) | Del |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Electrolysis is the process of driving a non-spontaneous chemical reaction using electrical energy. An external DC voltage source forces current through an electrolyte (ionic solution or molten salt), causing chemical changes at the electrodes.
In water electrolysis, water is split into hydrogen and oxygen:
Minimum theoretical voltage required: 1.23 V. In practice, ~1.5–2 V is needed due to overpotential.
Cathode (−) — Reduction:
Anode (+) — Oxidation:
The cathode produces hydrogen (colourless); the anode produces oxygen (colourless). Twice as many moles of H₂ are produced as O₂, giving a 2:1 volume ratio.
First Law: Mass deposited ∝ charge passed. Q = I × t
Second Law: Moles produced depend on stoichiometry.
Where F = 96485 C/mol (Faraday constant).
Volume at STP: V = n × 22400 mL/mol
Pure water is a poor conductor — it has very few ions. Adding an electrolyte greatly increases conductivity:
The electrolyte ions carry current through solution but are NOT consumed (for water electrolysis with inert electrodes).