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Cathodic Protection

  • Page ID
    2974
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    Chemical Concepts Demonstrated

    • Corrosion
    • Cathodic protection
    • Sacrificial anode

    Demonstration

    Both dishes contain a solution of HCl, 3% H2O2, and KSCN.
    • The first dish contains an iron nail.
    • The second dish contains an iron nail with one end wrapped in copper wire connected to a piece of zinc metal.
    cath.gif

    Observations

    The solution in the dish containing the lone nail turns a pink color, and the intensity of the color increases over time. In the dish containing the nail/zinc metal connection, a gas is produced on the surface of the metal, but the pink color does not appear. When the connection between the nail and the zinc metal is severed, the solution begins to turn pink.

    Explanations (including important chemical equations)

    The pink coloration is due to the formation of Fe(SCN)2+/Fe(SCN)2+ complexes. This indicates that the iron metal is being oxidized to the Fe3+ ion. This won't occur in the second dish as long as the nail is connected to the zinc metal strip. When the two metals are connected, the zinc undergoes oxidation to Zn 2+ at the same time that H + ions are reduced to H2on the surface of the iron nail.


    Cathodic Protection is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by George Bodner.

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