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Quantitative electrolysis of aqueous copper(II) sulfate

This demonstration is designed to find the value of the Faraday constant – the amount of electric charge carried by one mole of electrons - from the electrolysis of aqueous copper(II) sulfate solution, using weighed copper electrodes.

Read our standard health & safety guidance

Lesson organisation

This is a relatively straightforward demonstration to set up and carry out, but there is not much to see while it is taking place. This provides an ideal opportunity to ask students to prepare a suitable results sheet and to explain how the masses of the electrodes, the current passed and the time elapsed can be used to calculate a value for the Faraday constant. The experiment will take around 40 minutes.

Students can be told that the calculations are relevant for industrial applications of electrolysis, for example in the extraction of elements such as sodium and chlorine, and in the electroplating industry.

Apparatus and chemicals

Eye protection
Access to a fume cupboard

Beaker (250 cm3)
Beaker (100 or 150 cm3)
DC power pack
Connecting leads, including two fitted with crocodile clips, 3
Ammeter, preferably digital and a demonstration model
Rheostat
Switch
Stop clock
Balance (weighing to +/-0.01 g)
Hot-air blower, such as a hair drier
Emery paper
Paper towels or tissues

Copper foil electrodes, 2 (see note 1)
Aqueous copper(II) sulphate, about 1.0 mol dm-3 (Harmful, Dangerous for the environment), 200 cm3
Propanone (Highly flammable, Irritant), about 200 cm3

Technical notes

Copper(II) sulfate solution (Harmful, Dangerous for the environment) Refer to CLEAPSS Hazcard 27C and Recipe card 19
Propanone (Highly Flammable, Irritant) Refer to CLEAPSS Hazcard 85

1 These should be 2 - 3 cm wide and long enough to reach from the bottom of a 250 cm3 beaker to the rim, where they can be folded over and gripped by the crocodile clips on the leads.

Procedure

SAFETY: Wear eye protection

a Clean the copper electrodes with emery paper, rinse under the tap and dry thoroughly using paper towels and a hot-air blower.

b Mark the electrodes as + or at one end, and weigh them separately. Record the masses.

c Set up the circuit as shown in the diagram, clamping the electrodes to the rim of the beaker using the crocodile clips. Make sure the electrodes do not touch.

Quantitative Electrolysis Of Aq Sol

d Fill the beaker with copper(II) sulfate solution to just below the crocodile clips.

e Start the stop clock and switch on the current, setting the rheostat so that a current of 0.50 A passes through the solution.

f The current alters slightly throughout the electrolysis, so it is important to make continual adjustments to the rheostat to keep the current constant.

g After about 30 min switch off the current and stop the clock.

h Remove the electrodes from the electrolyte, wash them carefully under running water, then rinse them in a beaker of propanone in a fume cupboard. Finally dry them by allowing the propanone to evaporate in a well-ventilated laboratory, and away from any naked flames.

i Re-weigh the dry electrodes.
The results should be entered in a table, for example:

Quantitative Electrolysis Aq Sol Table

Teaching notes

It is difficult to avoid fluctuations in current throughout the electrolysis, and thus obtain an accurate value to use in the calculations.

Be careful to avoid any movement of the electrodes during the electrolysis.

Thorough washing and drying of the electrodes is vital. A tiny amount of moisture left on the electrodes causes a considerable error in the mass calculations. The electrodes should NOT be heated in a flame to dry them as the copper will oxidise on the surface to form black copper(II) oxide. After initial drying by evaporation of the propanone, a hot-air blower could be used.

The student questions here (136 KB) work through the process of calculating the Faraday constant. Students could also be asked to use the official value of 96500 Coulombs per mole to calculate the percentage error.

Answers to student questions

5 The calculated value for the Faraday constant should be correct to within about 10%. The major error comes from the value for the current, which is hard to keep constant to two significant figures.

6 The reaction at the cathode is: Cu2+(aq) + 2e → Cu(s)

7 The concentration of Cu2+ ions in solution remains constant. In a given time as many of these ions are produced at the anode as are being removed at the cathode.

8 The coating of solid copper on the cathode tends to be ‘spongy’ and some can be lost when electrode is washed or dried. Some may also have fallen off the cathode during electrolysis. Thus the mass gain of the cathode is an unreliable measure of the quantity of copper actually deposited there.

Health & Safety checked, August 2008

Updated 7 Nov 2008

Average rating: 4 out of 5

Your reviews

excellent

Submitted by: jon nom on 17 November 2008

Ensure you break it down simpler.

Submitted by: kemoy blake on 8 April 2009

Love it!

Submitted by: Kate on 30 September 2009

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