Hi i'm new in the forum, i'd like to help in everything i can.
But now i have a question many people get's confused and i hope someone could give me a nice explanation.
The thing is how to know which reaction is gonna occur into an electrolitic cell from all the posibilities.
For example, i built an electrolitic cell, it has 2 electrodes, one is made of stainless steel, the other is common graphite; and i use sodium bicarbonate as electrolyte.
The cell works nice... and fast too, electrodes are large, and i'm using a printer transformer, a 30V-0,8A lexmark one.
I use it to inflate a balloon, and it works.
The thing is that i thinked at first (in old prototypes), that the reaction that was taking place was always the classic electrolysis separating H2 and O2, but searching some information i find that that's wrong.
I was producing H2 and CO2 that came from the graphite bar (according the internet).
If am not wrong (and please correct me!!), production of O2 needs 1,3V only and i could'nt find the CO2 one (i thinks it's more).
So that's an example of two possible reactions, but only one happens.
Weird answers i got: 1.Both reactions can occur at the same time, 2. Obviously will happen the CO2 one, 3. Both reactions occur in fact, but the O2 is cinetically disadvantaged (wtf, an explanation of this would be REALLY nice); etc of similar answers.
According to my knowledge, ONE reactions occurs (don't know which) until equilibrium is reached, or working conditions change.
Tested other electrolytes, alkalyne ones works always like the recent example.
The other 2 i have are HCl and NaCl, but both works the sames way, i got hydrogen, and clorine oxidizes and got Cl2 and i almost die trying (many times xD).
So i'd like a complete explanation or at least thoughts to discuss, that would be interesting, and if obviously everyone is invited to propose forms to modify my experiment to get O2.
So that's it, greetings
Oh and of course ,can't leave without evidence!