Students investigate how electricity drives chemical reactions and how chemical reactions can generate electricity, discovering the principles of electrochemistry.
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Teach: electrolysis, electrode, cathode, anode, oxidation, reduction, redox, OIL RIG, galvanic cell, electroplating. The OIL RIG mnemonic — Oxidation Is Loss, Reduction Is Gain (of electrons) — is the most useful memory tool in this topic.
Focus on the electrolysis setup and observations before introducing the oxidation/reduction explanation at the particle level.
Can students describe what happens at the cathode and anode during electrolysis? Can they use OIL RIG correctly to identify oxidation and reduction in a given reaction?
Pencil graphite as electrodes, salt water as electrolyte, and a battery is all that is needed. The electrolysis of salt water is safe and produces visible results. All other equipment is improvised.
Students often think electrolysis only works with water. Any ionic compound in solution or in molten form can be electrolysed — the key requirement is mobile ions, not water.
Electrochemistry underpins battery technology, metal extraction, electroplating, and fuel cell development. Understanding it connects chemistry to energy technology and sustainability.
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