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14-September-2008 18:38:37 - Reduction potential This article may require cleanup to meet 's quality standards. Please improve this article if you can. May 2008 Reduction potential also known as redox potential, oxidation / reduction potential or ORP is the tendency of a chemical species to acquire electrons and thereby be reduced. Each species has its own intrinsic reduction potential; the more positive the potential, the greater the species' affinity for electrons and tendency to be reduced. In aqueous solutions, the reduction potential is the tendency of the solution to either gain or lose electrons when it is subject to change by introduction of a new species. A solution with a higher more positive reduction potential than the new species will have a tendency to gain electrons from the new species i.e. to be reduced by oxidizing the new species and a solution with a lower more negative reduction potential will have a tendency to lose electrons to the new species i.e. to be oxidized by reducing the new species. Just as the transfer of hydrogen ions between chemical species determines the pH of an aqueous solution, the transfer of electrons between chemical species determines the reduction potential of an aqueous solution. Like pH, the reduction potential represents an intensity factor. It does not characterize the capacity of the system for oxidation or reduction, in much the same way that pH does not characterize the buffering capacity. Contents 1 Standard hydrogen electrode 2 Saturated calomel electrode 3 Half-cells 4 Nernst equation 5 In biochemistry 6 In geology 7 See also 8 References 9 External links Standard hydrogen electrode See also: Standard hydrogen electrode Reduction potential is measured in volts V, millivolts mV, or Eh 1 Eh = 1 mV. Because the absolute potentials are difficult to accurately measure, reduction potentials are defined relative to the standard hydrogen electrode SHE which is arbitrarily given a potential of 0.00 volts. Standard reduction potential E0, is measured under standard conditions: 25°C, a 1 M concentration for each ion participating in the reaction, a partial pressure of 1 atm for each gas that is part of the reaction, and metals in their pure state. Historically, many countries, including the United States and Canada, used standard oxidation potentials rather than reduction potentials in their calculations. These are simply the negative of standard reduction potentials, so it is not a major problem in practice. However, because these can also be referred to as redox potentials, the terms reduction potentials and oxidation potentials are preferred by the IUPAC. The two may be explicitly distinguished in symbols as Er0 and Eo0. Saturated calomel electrode See also: Saturated calomel electrode Although measurement of the reduction potential in aqueous samples is relatively straightforward, many factors limit its interpretation, such as irreversible reactions, slow electrode kinetics, non-equilibrium, presence of multiple redox couples, electrode poisoning, small exchange currents and inert redox couples. Consequently, practical measurements seldom correlate with calculated values. Nevertheless, reduction potential measurement has proven useful as an analytical tool in monitoring changes in a system rather than determining their absolute value e.g. process control and titrations. Reduction potentials of aqueous solutions are determined by measuring the potential difference between an inert indicator electrode in contact with the solution and a stable reference electrode connected to the solution by a salt bridge. The indicator electrode acts as a platform for electron transfer to or from the reference half cell. It is typically platinum, although gold and graphite can be used. The reference half cell consists of a redox standard of known potential. The standard hydrogen electrode SHE is the reference from which all standard redox potentials are determined and has been assigned an arbitrary half cell potential of 0.0 mV. However, it is fragile and impractical for routine laboratory use. Therefore, Ag/AgCl and saturated calomel SCE reference electrodes are commonly used. The voltage relationships for several different reference electrodes at 25 °C can be interrelated as follows: Reference electrode Electrode potential with respect to SHE mV Standard hydrogen electrode SHE 0 Saturated calomel electrode SCE + 245 Ag/AgCl, 1 M KCl + 236 Ag/AgCl, 4 M KCl + 200 Ag/AgCl, sat. KCl +199 For example: If you had a reading of 100 mV using a saturated KCl Ag/AgCl reference and wanted to refer it back to an SHE you would add 199 mV to obtain 299 mV. Alternatively, if you took a reading in the same solution using an SCE, you would obtain 54 mV subtract 245 mV from 299 mV. Half-cells The relative reactivities of different half-cells can be compared to predict the direction of electron flow. A higher E0 means there is a greater tendency for reduction to occur, while a lower one means there is a greater tendency for oxidation to occur. Any system or environment that accepts electrons from a normal hydrogen electrode is a half cell that is defined as having a positive redox potential; any system donating electrons to the hydrogen electrode is defined as having a negative redox potential. Eh is measured in millivolts mV. A high positive Eh indicates an environment that favors oxidation reaction such as free oxygen. A low negative Eh indicates a strong reducing environment, such as free metals. Sometimes when electrolysis is carried out in an aqueous solution, water, rather than the solute, is oxidized or reduced. For example, if an aqueous solution of NaCl is electrolyzed, water may be reduced at the cathode to produce H2g and OH- ions, instead of Na+ being reduced to Nas, as occurs in the absence of water. It is the reduction potential of each species present that will determine which species will be oxidized or reduced. Absolute reduction potentials can be determined if we find the actual potential between electrode and electrolyte for any one reaction. Surface polarization interferes with measurements, but various sources give an estimated potential for the standard hydrogen electrode of 4.4 V to 4.6 V the electrolyte being positive. Half-cell equations can be combined if one is reversed to an oxidation in a manner that cancels out the electrons to obtain an equation without electrons in it. Nernst equation Main article: Nernst equation The Eh and pH of a solution are related. For a half-cell equation conventionally written as reduction, or with electrons on the right side: aA + bB + n e- + h H+ = cC + dD The half-cell standard potential Eo is given by: Eo volts = -ΔG/nF where ΔG is the Gibbs free energy change, n is the number of electrons involved, and F is Faraday's constant. The Nernst equation relates pH and Eh: Eh = Eo + 0.059/n x log Aa Bb / Cc Dd - 0.059 h/n pH where square brackets indicate activities and exponents are shown in the conventional manner. This equation is the equation of a straight line for Eh as a function of pH with a slope of -0.059h/n volt pH has no units. This equation predicts lower Eh at higher pH values - This is observed for reduction of O2 to OH- and for reduction of H+ to H2. If H+ were on the opposite side of the equation from H+, the slope of the line would be reversed higher Eh at higher pH. An example of that would be the formation of magnetite Fe3O4 from HFeO2-aq:1 3 HFeO2- + H+ = Fe3O4 + 2 H2O + 2 e- where Eh = -1.1819 - 0.0885 logHFeO2- + 0.0295 pH. Note that the slope of the line is -1/2 the -0.059 value above, since h/n = -1/2. In biochemistry Many enzymatic reactions are oxidation-reduction reactions in which one compound is oxidized and another compound is reduced. The ability of an organism to carry out oxidation-reduction reactions depends on the oxidation-reduction state of the environment, or its reduction potential Eh. Strictly aerobic microorganisms can be active only at positive Eh values, whereas strict anaerobes can be active only at negative Eh values. Redox affects the solubility of nutrients, especially metal ions. In geology See also: Pourbaix diagram Eh-pH Pourbaix diagrams are commonly used in mining and geology for assessment of the stability fields of minerals and dissolved species See Eh geology for a very limited discussion. Under conditions where a mineral solid phase is the most stable form of an element, these diagrams show that mineral. As with results from all thermodynamic equilibrium evaluations, these diagrams should be used with caution. Although the formation of a mineral or its dissolution may be predicted to occur under a set of conditions, the process may be negligible because its rate is so slow. Under those circumstances, kinetic evaluations are necessary. However, the equilibrium conditions can be used to evaluate the direction of spontaneous changes and the magnitude of the driving force behind them. See also Galvanic cell Electrolytic cell Electromotive force Electrochemical potential Standard electrode potential Table of standard electrode potentials Oxygen radical absorbance capacity Eh geology Redox References May 2008 ^ Garrels, R.M.; Christ, C.L. 1990. Minerals, Solutions, and Equilibria. London: Jones and Bartlett. External links Redox potential definition Large table of potentials Site broken. Archived version on the Internet Archive. Retrieved from http://en..org/wiki/Reduction_potential Categories: Electrochemistry | PotentialHidden categories: Cleanup from May 2008 | All pages needing cleanup | Articles needing additional references from May 2008 Views Article Discussion this page History Personal tools Log in / create account Navigation Main page Contents Featured content Current events Random article Search Go Search Interaction Community portal Recent changes Contact Donate to Help Toolbox What links here Related changes Upload file Special pages Printable version Permanent link Cite this page Languages Català ÄŒesky Deutsch Español Français 日本語 Português РуÑ?Ñ?кий СрпÑ?ки / Srpski Svenska This page was last modified on 30 August 2008, at 17:51

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