thanks you for your continuous help, i really appreciate it
again, just a recap on the details, a strip of zinc metal and a stick of carbon is inside the same beaker where the beaker is filled halfway with salt water.
uhm as i mentioned earlier, my teacher and i (especially myself) dont really know whats going on, so if type a no0b answer pls pardon me.
this is as far as i got:
salt water: H2O + NaCl
cathode: C
anode: Zn
since the direction of the electron flow is from left to right (Zn to C)in this electrolytic cell, we know that the negative end of this cell is Zn, making it the anode and making the C the positive end, cathode. so there must be redox going on in the copper and oxidation in the zinc.
so the anode (zinc) is reacting with the salt water and it is releasing Zn2+ to the salt water solution(?) because it is oxidizing. but idk what moves in to the cathode (carbon) but there has to be something because it is under redox. knowing that is i believe the key to my question. all i know so far is that the carbon is taking in something with electrons bringing it to the other electrode, in this case, zinc where this zinc metal is pushing off Zn2+ to the electrolyte, then back to the carbon taking in something.. and so on, creating an equilibrium.
what do you think? what is the real answer?