AQA A-Level Physical Chemistry 3.1.11 Electrode Potentials & Cells Standard Electrode Potentials
3.1.11

Standard Electrode Potentials

Understanding half-cell equilibria, standard conditions, and the standard hydrogen reference electrode.

When a metal is dipped into a solution of its own ions, an equilibrium is established between the metal atoms on the surface and the metal ions in the solution. This setup forms a half-cell. To measure the relative tendency of different half-cells to gain or lose electrons, we connect them to a universal reference electrode: the Standard Hydrogen Electrode.

🔑 Key Principle

It is impossible to measure the absolute potential of a single isolated half-cell. We can only measure the potential difference between two half-cells connected in a complete electrical circuit. By convention, we compare all half-cells to the Standard Hydrogen Electrode, which is assigned a potential of exactly 0.00 V.

Half-Cell Equilibria

In any half-cell, a redox equilibrium is established. Standard IUPAC rules state that half-equations for electrodes must always be written in the reduction direction (gaining electrons):

\( \text{M}^{n+}\text{(aq)} + n\text{e}^- \rightleftharpoons \text{M(s)} \)

Depending on the relative position of this equilibrium, the electrode will accumulate either a positive or negative charge compared to the solution. A position of equilibrium that lies to the left indicates a tendency to lose electrons, while a position to the right indicates a tendency to gain electrons.

Standard Electrode Potential (\( E^\theta \))

The electromotive force (EMF) of a cell composed of a specific half-cell connected to a standard hydrogen electrode under standard conditions of 298 K temperature, 100 kPa gas pressure, and 1.00 mol dm^-3 concentration of all ions.

Standard Conditions

Because the position of a half-cell equilibrium is sensitive to conditions, we must measure electrode potentials under strict standard conditions:

Standard Hydrogen Electrode (SHE)

The reference half-cell used to measure standard electrode potentials. It consists of hydrogen gas at 100 kPa bubbling over a platinum foil electrode coated in platinum black, immersed in a solution of 1.00 mol dm^-3 hydrogen ions at 298 K.

The Standard Hydrogen Electrode (SHE) Platinum Wire H2 Gas In (100 kPa) Solution of H+ ions (1.00 mol dm-3, e.g. HCl) Platinum foil coated in platinum black catalyst 2H+(aq) + 2e- <=> H2(g) E = 0.00 V

Why is Platinum Used?

The hydrogen half-cell involves a gas (\( \text{H}_2 \)) and ions in solution (\( \text{H}^+ \)). Neither of these can act as a physical solid electrode to complete an electrical connection. Therefore, we use platinum because it is:

📝 AQA Examiner Tip

When asked to describe the SHE in exams, you must mention all three conditions: 298 K temperature, 100 kPa (or 1 bar) pressure of hydrogen gas, and 1.00 mol dm^-3 concentration of hydrogen ions. A common trap is to write 1.00 mol dm^-3 sulfuric acid. Sulfuric acid is diprotic (\( \text{H}_2\text{SO}_4 \)), so a 1.00 mol dm^-3 solution contains 2.00 mol dm^-3 of \( \text{H}^+ \). If you use sulfuric acid, the concentration must be exactly 0.50 mol dm^-3 to provide standard conditions!

Measuring Standard Electrode Potentials

To measure the standard electrode potential of any other half-cell, we connect it to the Standard Hydrogen Electrode using a high-resistance voltmeter. For example, connecting a standard zinc half-cell (\( \text{Zn}^{2+}/\text{Zn} \)) to the SHE gives a reading of -0.76 V. Connecting a standard copper half-cell (\( \text{Cu}^{2+}/\text{Cu} \)) gives a reading of +0.34 V.

✏️ Worked Example 1
Identify the species in the two half-cells and state standard conditions when measuring the standard electrode potential of the iron(III)/iron(II) half-cell.

Step 1: Write down the equilibrium for the half-cell:

\( \text{Fe}^{3+}\text{(aq)} + \text{e}^- \rightleftharpoons \text{Fe}^{2+}\text{(aq)} \)

Since both species in this half-cell are ions in aqueous solution, we need an inert platinum electrode to make electrical contact, just like in the SHE.

Step 2: Define standard conditions:

  • Temperature of the system must be 298 K.
  • The concentration of \( \text{Fe}^{3+}\text{(aq)} \) must be exactly 1.00 mol dm^-3.
  • The concentration of \( \text{Fe}^{2+}\text{(aq)} \) must be exactly 1.00 mol dm^-3.
  • The SHE must have a \( \text{H}^+ \) concentration of 1.00 mol dm^-3 and \( \text{H}_2 \) gas pressure of 100 kPa.
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