I do not have much of an electrochemistry background so I'm looking for some help. I have conducted an experiment where I bias a potato(russet) in a quadrupole arrangement using gold plated electrodes. The bias was set as follows: top-left = +9V, top-right = 0V, bottom-left = 0V, bottom-right = +9V in the attached pic. During this experiment I observed a gas reaction(bubbling) at the 0V electrodes which tended to force them out of the potato. Is it likely that a redox recation occured at the 0V electrodes? If so is it possible to identify what that reaction would have been? In literature I have found a few common redox reactions involving water, oxygen, hydroxide or hydrogen but I'm not sure how to determine which of the reactions is what I was probably observing. The potato probably has water and hydroxide readily available. At the +9V electrodes I did not observe a gas reaction. However I did notice after completion of the experiment that the potato had turned a blue-green color around the electrodes which was darker right next to the metal. The electrode was a metal pin, plated with gold on top of soft nickel. I did notice that the gold was partially gone from some of the electrodes after the experiment. Is it likely that the electrode reaction at the +9V electrodes was Au -> Au3+ + 3e-? Would you expect Au3+ to be blue-green in a liquid medium? Are there other reactions I should be considering at both the negative and positivie electrodes?