Hi everyone,
Can someone please check if I've done this problem correctly?
It goes:
The addition of aqueous ammonia to the cathode compartment of the cell described below reduces the cell potential. Likewise, addition of aqueous ammonia to the anode compartment increases the cell potential.
Zn(s) / Zn
2+ (aq) // Cu
2+ (aq) / Cu(s)
Assume that [Cu
2+]
original = [Zn
2+]
original = 0.10 M and that both form stable complexes with ammonia (overall formation constants >10
10).
Show how to estimate the ratio of the overall formation constant for [Cu(NH
3)
2]
2+ to the overall formation constant for [Zn(NH
3)
2]
2+ if the cell potential is observed to be 0.96 V after adding equal amounts (assume a large excess) of 6.0 M NH
3 to each compartment (assume that T=298K)
Okay, here's my way, and I am very sceptical about it
E
o (Zn/Zn
2+) = -0.76 V
E
o (Cu/Cu
2+) = 0.34 V
Using the form of the Nernst equation valid at 298 K
E = E
o - [0.0257/n In(Q)] n=2 mol electrons
So for zinc, E = -0.76 -0.01285 In(Q
1)
And for copper, E = 0.34 - 0.01285 In(Q
2)
Since E
cell = E(Cu/Cu
2+) - E(Zn/Zn
2+)
0.96 = [0.34 -0.01285 In(Q
2)] - [-0.76 -0.01285 In(Q
1)]
0.96 = 1.1 - 0.01285 In(Q
2) + 0.01285 In(Q
1)
-0.14 = - 0.01285 In(Q
2) + 0.01285 In(Q
1)
Divide through by -0.01285
10.9 = In(Q
2) - In(Q
1)
= In(Q
2/Q
1)
e
10.9 = Q
2/Q
1 = 54000 ?
The overall formation constant for [Cu(NH
3)
2]
2+ is 54000 times larger than the formation constant for [Zn(NH
3)
2]
2+??
Is my way even remotely correct?