O Level Physics Notes: The Simple Cell
Most often copper and zinc are used as the electrodes. The zinc slowly dissolves into the sulphuric acid and bubbles of hydrogen are formed on the copper plate.
Pure sulphuric acid has the chemical symbol
but
when the acid is made into a solution with water the
group
of atoms separates from the hydrogen atoms, taking two electrons with
them, one from each hydrogen atom, leaving them both with a positive
charge. The
group and the hydrogen are now ions. We can write down the equation
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As zinc dissolves from the zinc electrode the atoms go into
solution in the form of zinc ions,
each
zinc ion leaving behind two electrons on the electrode. These
electrons are the source of the electric current which goes through
the wire. We may think of the zinc ions being attracted into
si=olution by the
ions.
At the same time, hydrogen ions move to the copper plate where the
collect electrons and become a gas, forming bubble and leaving the
solution.
Normally when zinc dissolves in acid, internal molecular energy is produced and the solution gets warm. In the simple cell the action of the acid on the zinc results in the production of electrical energy instead.