Limiting reactant is not something that you should worry about when talking about dissociation (and no, in general it is not just the one with the lower number of moles, as it depends on the ratio in which things react).
What is the reaction that you are interested in? Just water electrolysis? Then the acid is there only to lower the resistance (it increases conductivity of the solution). In other situations it may play some additional roles.
As to dangers - produced hydrogen easily mixes with oxygen (either the atmospheric one or produced in the anode reaction) and the mixture is highly explosive (and easy to ignite - it won't explode on its own, but just a spark or flame and it goes kaboom). The less hydrogen produced, the safer you are.
Hello again Borek, this relates to a question I have asked here and previously on another forum. I am taking the development of the system step-by-step.
The end goal is to cause precipitation of calcium carbonate, from calcium carbonate solution, on a metal tube in the solution (via electrochemical generation of OH- ions at the surface).
I have spent some of the past week researching the effects of bubbling ##CO_{2}## into solution and, as per my previous posts, have come to the conclusion that this would significantly contribute. However the limited change in pH with ##CO_{2}## wont have a massive influence on the secondary effect of calcium carbonate dissolution.
Therefore, I decided to use a supporting acidic electrolyte solution to decrease the pH further than the ##CO_{2}## alone. Allowing more calcium carbonate to be dissolved before electrolysis and, like you say, increase the electrochemical process.
I am currently looking at electrodes that wont dissolve in acid, such as glassy carbon, as opposed to my original idea of copper foil.
Thank you for the warning on the hydrogen, I'll be careful no bunsen burners are running nearby in the lab. Also when i come to the acid will always add acid to water and not water to acid.