Electrolysis of Sodium Chloride (Oxford AQA IGCSE Chemistry)

Revision Note

Electrolysis of Sodium Chloride

How is sodium hydroxide produced?

  • Brine is a concentrated solution of aqueous sodium chloride

  • When electrolysed, it produces chlorine and hydrogen at the electrodes leaving behind sodium hydroxide solution

Industrial Uses of the Products

Substance

Used to make

chlorine

bleach and plastics

hydrogen 

margarine

sodium hydroxide

soap and detergents 

  • The electrolyte is concentrated sodium chloride which contains the following ions:

    • Na+

    • H+

    • Cl

    • OH

Reaction at the Negative Electrode:

  • The H+ ions are discharged at the cathode as hydrogen is less reactive than sodium

  • The H+ ions gain electrons (reduction)to form hydrogen gas 

2H+ + 2e → H2

Reaction at the Positive Electrode:

  • The Cl ions are discharged at the anode 

  • They lose electrons (oxidation) and chlorine gas forms

2Cl → Cl +  2e

  • The Na+ and OH ions remain behind and form the NaOH solution

The production of sodium hydroxide

Diagram showing the hydrogen gas, chlorine gas and sodium hydroxide as the brine electrolysis products
Diagram showing the products of the electrolysis of brine

Examiner Tips and Tricks

Make sure you can recall the equations that occur at the anode and cathode and explain how each product is formed.

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