Monday, December 24, 2012

How does a Lemon Battery work?

I have been trying to figure out how batteries work ever since Mr. White (on Breaking Bad) started his van by using ground-up bits of zinc and copper to make a primitive battery. Everyone knows you can make a battery by sticking pieces of zinc and copper in a lemon. But why does it work?

Your Grade 9 science teacher probably wrote a chemical equation something like this, combining the two half-cell reactions for zinc and copper to get:
This would be fine except there is no copper in solution. This reaction works for the fully-developed zinc-copper cell with the copper strip immersed in copper sulfate solution, and the zinc strip immersed in zinc sulfate solution, and the two solutions linked by the "salt bridge". It really doesn't explain the lemon battery. (And it doesn't explain where Mr. White got ahold of copper sulfate solution for his battery.)

A thorough search of the internet confirms that it is the hydrogen ions from the acid, not copper ions, that participate in the reaction. Hydrogen from the citric acid is reduced at the copper electrode, consuming electons and completing the circuit. The copper has nothing to do with the reaction. (Maybe Mr. White used some no-name acid to complete his battery, but the episode was a little sketchy on that point.)

There's still one thing that bothers me. Why does the hydrogen gas only form at the copper electrode? Shouldn't it form just as readily at the zinc electrode? I can't find any explanation as to why it wouldn't, except for this article by Jerry Goodisman where he refers, near the very end, to the fact that Zinc is supposedly a poor absorber of hydrogen.

But if it was hard getting to the bottom of the lemon battery, it is much harder to figure out how the original Voltaic Pile of 1799 could have worked. The story is that Volta stacked copper and zinc discs and separated them with pieces of cardboard soaked in salt water. No copper sulfate, no hydrogen ions...just salt water. I've scoured the internet looking for anyone who has ventured to write a chemical equation to show what is going on, with no success. The closest I found was this article by Franco Decker, who alludes to the difficulties people had back in the 19th century trying to explain it, and concluding that no one was successful until Nernst published his analysis of the reaction in 1890...almost a hundred years after the fact! But then, Decker goes on to analyze the pile assuming an acidic electrolyte. Well, it's easy to see what happens if you use an acid...it's the same as the lemon battery. What I still can't figure out is how it worked originally with salt water.

Any ideas?

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

The zinc anode is oxidized forming zinc ions. The zinc ions react with chloride ions making ZnCl2. At the copper cathode sodium ions reduced making Na metal.

2NaCl + Zn --> ZnCl2 + 2Na

Marty Green said...

Interesting theory. You posted this two weeks ago but I only just noticed it. I looked up the enthalpies of formation of salt and zinc chloride, and it seems to be thermodaynamically unfavorable. However, if you allow the sodium metal to react with water, releasing hydrogen gas, it gets quite a lot better. But the change in enthalpy is still positive.

But it's close. And I didn't calculate the entropies. So maybe that's it.

For the record, my overall reaction is then:

2NaCl + Zn + 2H20
--> ZnCl2 + 2NaOH + H2

with enthalpy changes:

-822 + 0 - 572 --> -415 - 852 + 0

for a net positive enthalpy of 127 kJ.



Anonymous said...

Thanks this article helped me with my 10th grade science fare project

David Wooster said...

Interesting discussion. I don't see how it's possible that sodium ions would steal electrons from zinc metal. If that were the case, wouldn't you get a vigorous chemical reaction (i.e. explosion) when zinc metal is added to salt water?

The only answer I can come up with is the following:
On the outside of the copper electrode, there is a thin coating of copper oxide. When the copper electrode is immersed in liquid (saltwater or acid), a small amount of the oxidized copper dissolves and this accepts the electrons from the wire to become copper metal (which gets deposited on the copper electrode).

I could be wrong, though.

Anonymous said...

ZnCl2 is highly soluble in aqueous solution, this solid would not form in solution.