untouchablecuz
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- 2009
I was revising production of materials and this got me stumped. What is the anode, postive or negative? What is the cathode, negative or positive? Do the electrons flow from anode to cathode or from cathode to anode?
I always thought:
The anode is POSITIVE since it attracts negative anions and because oxidation occurs at the anode (electrons are lost resulting in a deficiency of electrons).
The cathode is NEGATIVE since it attracts positive cations and because reduction occurs at the cathode (electrons are gained resulting in an excess amount of electrons).
Hence the current flows from cathode to anode.
BUT, many websites and textbooks say the complete converse: anode is negative, cathode is positive, current flows from anode to cathode.
Please explainnnnnnnnnnnnn?
EDIT: Another question, is the voltage greater when the elements acting as the cathode and anode are further apart on the list of standard potentials?
I always thought:
The anode is POSITIVE since it attracts negative anions and because oxidation occurs at the anode (electrons are lost resulting in a deficiency of electrons).
The cathode is NEGATIVE since it attracts positive cations and because reduction occurs at the cathode (electrons are gained resulting in an excess amount of electrons).
Hence the current flows from cathode to anode.
BUT, many websites and textbooks say the complete converse: anode is negative, cathode is positive, current flows from anode to cathode.
Please explainnnnnnnnnnnnn?
EDIT: Another question, is the voltage greater when the elements acting as the cathode and anode are further apart on the list of standard potentials?
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