Ok - the question has a beaker of KBr solution and two Platinum electrodes in it.
What are the reactions at the anode and cathode?
Are they:
Anode: 2H2O + 2e- --> H2(g) + 2OH- [E = -0.83 V] Reduction
Cathode: 2 H2O --> O2 (g) + 4H+ + 4e- [E = -1.23 V] Oxidation
[E(total) = -2.06 V]
or are the rxns the other way round? If not, why do we get the H2 producing rxn only at the anode and the O2 producing rxn at the cathode?
I always get confused... the platinum is inert, right
What are the reactions at the anode and cathode?
Are they:
Anode: 2H2O + 2e- --> H2(g) + 2OH- [E = -0.83 V] Reduction
Cathode: 2 H2O --> O2 (g) + 4H+ + 4e- [E = -1.23 V] Oxidation
[E(total) = -2.06 V]
or are the rxns the other way round? If not, why do we get the H2 producing rxn only at the anode and the O2 producing rxn at the cathode?
I always get confused... the platinum is inert, right