I have read a basic explanation of electrolysis but there are small details that i'm not understanding.
Let's say you have a cathode(negative), an anode(positive) both connected to a battery through a wire, and both dipped in solid lead bromide.
My chemistry book says the following will happen.
"As soon as you connect the power source, it pumps any mobile electrons away from the anode, to the cathode. At the moment, the lead(II) bromide is still solid."
Now wait a second, I thought a battery will only supply voltage in a complete circuit, and we don't have a complete circuit if the lead bromide is solid. If we simply attach an anode to the positive end of a battery, and a cathode to the negative end, will the battery really supply voltage to make the anode positive and the cathode negative when the circuit is incomplete? Will sticking a piece of metal to the negative end of a battery really make it negatively charged?