The Choice of the Hydrogen Electrode as the Base for the Electromotive Series
作者
Alfred W. von Smolinski,Carl E. Moore,Bruno Jaselskis
出处
期刊:Acs Symposium Series [American Chemical Society] 日期:1989-01-01卷期号:: 127-141被引量:2
标识
DOI:10.1021/bk-1989-0390.ch009
摘要
The electromotive series is a list of the elements in accordance with their electrode potentials. The measurement of what is commonly known as the "single electrode potential", the "half-reaction potential" or the "half-cell electromotive force" by means of a potentiometer requires a second electrode, a reference electrode, to complete the circuit. If the potential of the reference electrode is taken as zero, the measured E.M.F. will be equal to the potential of the unknown electrode on this scale. W. Ostwald prepared the first table of electrode potentials in 1887 with the dropping mercury electrode as a reference electrode. W. Nernst selected in 1889 the Normal Hydrogen Electrode as a reference electrode. G.N. Lewis and M. Randall published in 1923 their table of single electrode potentials with the Standard Hydrogen Electrode (SHE) as the reference electrode. The Commission of Electrochemistry of the I.U.P.A.C. meeting at Stockholm in 1953 defined the "electrode potential" of a half-cell with the SHE as the reference electrode.