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Question
a salt bridge containing potassium nitrate connects an anode and cathode in a voltaic cell. which answer correctly describes the movement of no₃⁻ ions? the no₃⁻ ions move across the voltmeter to neutralize the electrons. the no₃⁻ ions flow into the cathode compartment to neutralize the excess charge. the no₃⁻ ions flow into the anode compartment to neutralize the excess charge. the no₃⁻ ions do not move. they provide a pathway for electrons to travel through the salt bridge.
In a voltaic cell, at the anode, oxidation occurs (electrons are released, leaving a positive charge in the anode compartment). At the cathode, reduction occurs (electrons are consumed, leaving a negative charge in the cathode compartment). The salt bridge's ions move to neutralize excess charge. \( \text{NO}_3^- \) is an anion (negative charge). Anions move towards the anode (where there is excess positive charge) to neutralize it. Let's analyze each option:
- Option 1: Ions don't move through the voltmeter (electrons move through the external circuit, ions through the salt bridge). Eliminate.
- Option 2: \( \text{NO}_3^- \) (anion) should move to anode, not cathode. Eliminate.
- Option 3: Anode has excess positive charge (from oxidation, electrons leave, so more positive ions). \( \text{NO}_3^- \) (negative) moves to anode to neutralize. Correct.
- Option 4: Ions do move in the salt bridge, and electrons don't travel through the salt bridge (they go through the external wire). Eliminate.
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The \( \text{NO}_3^- \) ions flow into the anode compartment to neutralize the excess charge.