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Author: Subject: reduction potential
averageaussie
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[*] posted on 8-5-2023 at 18:09
reduction potential


Hello again all,

I believe I read somewhere that any element with a standard reduction potential below zinc's, -0.76 V, cannot be reduced out of an aqueous solution. I was wondering why this was, and if it is correct in the first place.

Thanks, averageaussie.
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clearly_not_atara
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[*] posted on 8-5-2023 at 20:38


It's not really about zinc. It's about the reaction:

H2O + e- >> OH- + H2 (V = -0.8277)

with a standard electrode potential just below that of zinc. Below that, water is reduced instead. Zinc just barely slides in under the wire.




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[*] posted on 9-5-2023 at 03:04


Correct (apart from Bismuth) as CNA said. Because anything less than this will reduce water to H2 and hydroxide.

On the wikipedia page you can see the relevant line at -0.8277V in bold.
Another line in bold shows how O2 can be produced from water giving H+ ions (of course, it is listed in reverse as a reduction reaction at +1.229V).
Half reactions between these two in bold are all the possible reactions that can be done in aqueous solution. Outside those bounds and you crack your water molecules preferentially.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_electrode_potential_(data_page)

Note that that is at standard conditions of temperature and concentration. You can bend the rules a little with different concentrations. You can also make some reactions occur by applying overpotential.
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