This causes electrons to flow in the opposite direction which both oxidizes the copper wire
Huh? Do you mean that copper wire oxidation depends on the current direction?
No, just that if the equilibrium is pushed far to the right it would respond by moving to the left providing the energy required to speed up the oxidation of the copper wire.
What kind of energy? And why this energy will speed up the oxidation of copper?
That's assuming that Fe2O3 is able to spontaneously reduce itself to Fe... Fe2O3 is thermodynamically stable, electrolysis is used just to speed up oxidation process that goes on its own in the presence of water and oxygen.
I researched this a bit and would like to apologize for my misguided assumptions, although I think I was on the right track just didn't spend enough time thinking or researching. The reason appears to be as follows:
Since water is the only source of oxygen in the system, for every molecule of Fe
2O
3 produced there are also 6 H
3O
+ molecules produced. This will make the solution acidic. That is why the pH of the solution after running the apparatus is important. If the solution is acidic after running the reaction; the H
3O
+ would either attack the iron rod, the copper wire or the Fe
2O
3. If the H
3O
+ attacked the rod H
2 gas would be produced as iron readily gives up electrons. As referenced in this article, especially note section 5:
http://www.aps.anl.gov/asd/me/medsi02/papers/MED026.pdf, it states that at slightly acidic pH the corrosion of copper, which this article states as black to reddish in color, by way of dissolved oxygen is greatly accellerated. Why does the whole wire get corroded if only the end is in the solution? I bet if you were to inspect the wire you would find that there is a thin layer of paper around the wire to act as an extra layer of insulator, or some other water absorbant material, it won't be a thick layer. It may even be that there is a small gap between the polymer used to coat the wire and the wire itself, this would then wick the water along the wire via capillary action. That explains why it takes so long for the whole wire to turn black...regardless of how the water travels along the wire it needs to come to equilibrium with the solution and over time it would oxidize the wire. The energy in the solution would be provided by the decrease in pH. It may be that the transformers fail because the connection between the circuit board and copper wire is inhibited by the corrosion of the copper wire at the solder site. This would continue after removing the wire from the solution because you can't really dry the inside of the wire. This article suggests that making a solution with pH of around 8 may sufficiently decelerate the oxidation process. Oxidized copper contacts are always troublesome with cell phones and other devices where the battery contacts and the contacts on the device are flat...anyone remember the old Nintendo problem of having to blow the contacts of cassette?