Relation between $E^\circ_{cell}$ and $K_{sp}$
Connecting Thermodynamics, Nernst Equation, and Solubility Equilibrium.
The Solubility Product ($K_{sp}$) of a sparingly soluble salt can be calculated using electrochemical data. By constructing a suitable galvanic cell where the dissolution process represents the cell reaction, we can derive a direct relationship between the standard cell potential ($E^\circ_{cell}$) and $K_{sp}$.
1. The Thermodynamic Connection
Free Energy Link
We know two fundamental relationships involving the standard Gibbs Free Energy change ($\Delta G^\circ$):
1. From Electrochemistry: $\Delta G^\circ = -nFE^\circ_{cell}$
2. From Equilibrium Thermodynamics: $\Delta G^\circ = -2.303 RT \log K_{eq}$
For a solubility equilibrium, the equilibrium constant $K_{eq}$ is equal to the Solubility Product $K_{sp}$.
Equating the two expressions for $\Delta G^\circ$:
2. The Derivation
Standard Equation
Rearranging the equation derived above:
At Standard Temperature (298 K):
- $R$ (Gas constant) = 8.314 J/K·mol
- $T$ = 298 K
- $F$ (Faraday's constant) = 96487 C/mol
The term $\frac{2.303 RT}{F}$ reduces to approximately 0.0591 V.
3. Example: Silver Chloride
Calculating $K_{sp}$ of $AgCl$
Consider the cell constructed to measure the solubility of AgCl:
Anode (Oxidation): $Ag(s) \rightarrow Ag^+(aq) + e^-$
Cathode (Reduction): $AgCl(s) + e^- \rightarrow Ag(s) + Cl^-(aq)$
Net Cell Reaction:
This is exactly the solubility equilibrium reaction!
Calculation:
Given standard potentials:
- $E^\circ_{Ag^+/Ag} = 0.80 \, V$
- $E^\circ_{Cl^-/AgCl/Ag} = 0.22 \, V$
Now, substitute into the formula ($n=1$):
Usually, $E^\circ_{cell}$ for a solubility equilibrium comes out negative because dissolution of sparingly soluble salts is non-spontaneous at standard conditions (1 M concentrations). This results in a very small $K_{sp}$ ($< 1$).
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