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An electrochemical cell is constructed as: Pt(I) | Fe3+, Fe2+ (a = 1) || Ce4+, Ce3+ (a = 1) | Pt(II), with E°(Fe3+/Fe2+) = 0.77 V and E°(Ce4+/Ce3+) = 1.61 V. If an ammeter is connected across the two platinum electrodes, what is the direction of conventional current flow in the external circuit, and how does the current change with time?
- Current flows in the external circuit from Pt(II) to Pt(I), and the current decreases with time.
- Current flows in the external circuit from Pt(I) to Pt(II), and the current decreases with time.
- Current flows in the external circuit from Pt(II) to Pt(I), and the current increases with time.
- Current flows in the external circuit from Pt(I) to Pt(II), and the current increases with time.
Correct answer: Current flows in the external circuit from Pt(II) to Pt(I), and the current decreases with time.
Solution
Ce4+/Ce3+ has the higher E° (1.61 V) so the cerium electrode (Pt II) is the cathode where Ce4+ is reduced; the iron electrode (Pt I) is the anode where Fe2+ is oxidized. Conventional current in the external circuit flows from the cathode (+) terminal Pt(II) to the anode Pt(I). The cell EMF = 1.61 - 0.77 = 0.84 V drives the reaction toward equilibrium; as Fe2+ and Ce4+ deplete the EMF decreases, so the current decreases with time until equilibrium (zero current).
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