use the Nernst equation, e.g. E = E ⦵ + (0.059/z) log [oxidised species] [reduced species] to predict quantitatively how the value of an electrode potential varies with the concentrations of the aqueous ions; examples include Cu2+(aq) + 2e– ⇌ Cu(s), Fe3+(aq) + e– ⇌ Fe2+(aq)
Standard detail
24.2.9
Depth 3Parent ID: 9FAC688444D4456EBC1C492F91B99D4DStandard set: Chemistry 9701 (2022, 2023, & 2024): A Level
Original statement
Quick facts
- Statement code
- 24.2.9
- List ID
- 9
- Standard ID
- A97B0AB27F0640EDA9261FA8587CF9EE
- Subject
- Science
- Grades
- HigherEducation
- Ancestor IDs
- 9FAC688444D4456EBC1C492F91B99D4DA0C9400C5C5E40CAB3697E33E3667B85020808DB3CCB41BC83B04F75182EBD49
- Source document
- Syllabus Cambridge International AS & A Level Chemistry 9701
- License
- CC BY 4.0 US