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Topic: Nernst Equation  (Read 7037 times)

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Offline abe.nong

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Nernst Equation
« on: February 07, 2012, 08:43:44 PM »
My first post:

on galvanic cells, I understand the application of the Nernst Equation. However, there is a certain number in the equation that I do not know where it came from. In the equation, there is the number 0.05916 what is the significance of the number, and how was it derived?

Thanks.

abe.nong

Offline UG

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Re: Nernst Equation
« Reply #1 on: February 07, 2012, 08:55:47 PM »
The 'full' Nernst equation can be written as E = E° - RT/nF ln Q
The number 0.05916 is derived from RT/F x 2.302585 where R = 8.314 J mol-1 K-1, F = 96485 C and they assume the temperature is 298.15 K and the number 2.302585 is to convert the natural log 'ln' to base 10 log. So your equation should look something like E = E° - 0.05916/n log Q where n is the number of electrons in the reaction.

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