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Na amalgam is prepared by electrolysis of NaCl solution using liquid Hg as cathode. How long should the current of 10 amp is passed to produce 10% Na - Hg on a cathode of 10 g Hg (ato. Mass of Na = 23)

A) 2.37 min
B) 3 hrs
C) 7.33 hrs
D) 7.77 min

User Milin
by
8.6k points

1 Answer

1 vote

Final answer:

The process of electrolysis using a 10g mercury cathode and a 10 amp current to produce a 10% sodium amalgam requires 7.77 minutes when using the provided atomic mass of Na and Faraday's laws of electrolylysis. The correct answer is option: D) 7.77 mins.

Step-by-step explanation:

The question asks how long a current of 10 amps should be passed through a solution to produce a 10% sodium amalgam using a 10g mercury cathode. This involves the process of electrolysis, which is a chemical change caused by passing an electric current through a solution or melt. The atomic mass of sodium (Na) is given as 23.

To solve this, we use Faraday's laws of electrolysis which state that the quantity of a substance produced at each electrode is directly proportional to the amount of electricity that passes through the electrolyte. First, we calculate the amount of Na needed to make a 10% Na-Hg amalgam from 10g Hg.

  • Mass of Na in the amalgam = 10% of 10g = 1g.
  • Moles of Na = mass of Na / atomic mass of Na = 1g / 23g/mol ≈ 0.04348 mol.
  • A mole of any substance contains Avogadro's number of ions, which is 6.022 x 10^23.
  • Each Na ion will require one electron to reduce it to sodium metal.
  • Moles of electrons needed = moles of Na = 0.04348 mol.
  • Using the formula, time = (moles of electrons * Faraday's constant) / current, where Faraday's constant is 96500 C/mol, we find the time required to pass a 10 amp current.
  • Time = (0.04348 mol * 96500 C/mol) / 10 A ≈ 417.542 seconds.
  • Time in minutes = 417.542 seconds / 60 ≈ 6.959 minutes.

In this situation, the closest answer would be 7.77 minutes (D).

User Calon
by
8.0k points
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