Hey guys,
I have always had difficulty understanding an aspect of the half cell, and I'm hoping someone here can clear it up for me.
Regardless of the type of cell, we think of the cathode as gaining electrons. For example, in the common zinc/copper galvanic cell (cell diagram: Zn l Zn2+ ll Cu2+ l Cu) we have zinc at the anode and copper at the cathode.
My question is twofold:
1. Why do we need copper at the cathode, and
2. Why don't we consider the Cu2+ the "cathode", as it is the cation that is actually being reduced.
Basically, why couldn't I just replace every cathode in the world with a platinum bar? Unlike the anode, which is obviously participating, it seems like the cathode is doing nothing important.
Thank you for your help