This may be simple, but if anyone can give a reference or a good description, (especially with data) as to how electrons are carried in a salt water solution?
I have found that different solutions are more or less effective in the current being carried. HCl is quite good while ammonium hydroxide is weak.
I think I understand how a metal can conduct electricity in that electrons are only held loosely by a metal, therefore, pushing electrons onto the metal will result in pushing them off at the cathode (or the other way around). Does the electrons reduce sodium to metallic sodium upon addition of an electron and that electron becomes transferred? Does any (oxidation-reduction) chemistry occur in solution at the microscopic level?
If ions supposedly move, how does that aid current movement?