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CATHERINE DRENNAN:
Cell potential-- cell

9
00:00:29,760 --> 00:00:34,890
potential delta
E cell, and we're

10
00:00:34,890 --> 00:00:39,690
going to relate this
back to delta G.

11
00:00:39,690 --> 00:00:44,070
So as we saw with these cells,
you have this flow of electrons

12
00:00:44,070 --> 00:00:46,030
through the circuit.

13
00:00:46,030 --> 00:00:49,410
They're generated at the anode
from the oxidation reaction,

14
00:00:49,410 --> 00:00:52,080
and they go over to the cathode.

15
00:00:52,080 --> 00:00:53,910
And when your cell
is running, it'll

16
00:00:53,910 --> 00:00:57,480
generate a potential
difference, this delta E cell,

17
00:00:57,480 --> 00:01:00,600
between those two
electrodes in the cell.

18
00:01:00,600 --> 00:01:05,950
So delta E cell has a
lot of different names.

19
00:01:05,950 --> 00:01:11,055
It's called cell potential, cell
voltage, electron motive force,

20
00:01:11,055 --> 00:01:12,360
EMF.

21
00:01:12,360 --> 00:01:16,350
All of these names are
valid, can be used.

22
00:01:16,350 --> 00:01:18,660
I'm going to try to
call it cell potential.

23
00:01:18,660 --> 00:01:20,370
Hopefully, I'm not
going to switch up.

24
00:01:20,370 --> 00:01:21,870
But if you see
any of these, it's

25
00:01:21,870 --> 00:01:23,460
talking about the same thing.

26
00:01:26,410 --> 00:01:31,950
So overall, then, if we
know this cell potential,

27
00:01:31,950 --> 00:01:35,130
we can relate this
back to delta G.

28
00:01:35,130 --> 00:01:38,280
And so that will then be able to
tell us whether the reaction is

29
00:01:38,280 --> 00:01:40,150
spontaneous or not.

30
00:01:40,150 --> 00:01:43,710
So the overall free energy,
Gibbs free energy, of the cell

31
00:01:43,710 --> 00:01:46,990
is related to the cell potential
by the following equation.

32
00:01:46,990 --> 00:01:49,800
So delta G for the cell
minus n, the number of moles

33
00:01:49,800 --> 00:01:53,280
of electrons that pass
through the system, Faraday's

34
00:01:53,280 --> 00:01:57,790
constant and that
cell potential.

35
00:01:57,790 --> 00:02:01,440
So we can think about
this at a particular time.

36
00:02:01,440 --> 00:02:03,810
We can also think
about this equation

37
00:02:03,810 --> 00:02:05,760
in the standard states.

38
00:02:05,760 --> 00:02:09,509
So let's just think again
about standard states

39
00:02:09,509 --> 00:02:13,390
so we can talk about delta
G0 for the cell and delta

40
00:02:13,390 --> 00:02:18,210
E0 for the cell-- so delta
E0, the cell potential, cell

41
00:02:18,210 --> 00:02:21,690
voltage, EMF for
the cell, in which

42
00:02:21,690 --> 00:02:25,470
the products and the reactants
are in their standard state.

43
00:02:25,470 --> 00:02:28,170
And the unit here is volts.

44
00:02:28,170 --> 00:02:30,720
So we have a new
unit that we haven't

45
00:02:30,720 --> 00:02:34,260
used before, I think-- volts.

46
00:02:34,260 --> 00:02:38,820
So let's look at an example
of how we would then calculate

47
00:02:38,820 --> 00:02:41,017
our delta E0 for a cell.

48
00:02:41,017 --> 00:02:42,600
And we'll do the
cell we've been using

49
00:02:42,600 --> 00:02:46,980
this whole time, our cell
with zinc at anode and copper

50
00:02:46,980 --> 00:02:48,720
at the cathode.

51
00:02:48,720 --> 00:02:51,660
And so we have our
anode reaction.

52
00:02:51,660 --> 00:02:56,370
And again, this is
our oxidation, anox.

53
00:02:56,370 --> 00:03:00,730
And our cathode
reaction, cathred.

54
00:03:00,730 --> 00:03:03,990
So we can write it out as the
reduction reaction happening

55
00:03:03,990 --> 00:03:05,850
at the cathode.

56
00:03:05,850 --> 00:03:10,320
And the equation we're going to
use for this is the following.

57
00:03:10,320 --> 00:03:15,610
So delta E0 of the cell, the
cell potential, equals E0,

58
00:03:15,610 --> 00:03:20,910
and E here is the standard
reduction potential--

59
00:03:20,910 --> 00:03:23,820
and this is the standard
reduction potential

60
00:03:23,820 --> 00:03:27,180
for the couple, the
reaction, that's

61
00:03:27,180 --> 00:03:32,760
happening at the cathode--
minus the standard reduction

62
00:03:32,760 --> 00:03:35,880
potential for the reaction
that's happening at the anode.

63
00:03:38,460 --> 00:03:45,630
So now we can look those
values in the back of the book.

64
00:03:45,630 --> 00:03:48,870
So we have for zinc the
standard reduction potential,

65
00:03:48,870 --> 00:03:54,330
minus 0.7629, and the
standard reduction

66
00:03:54,330 --> 00:03:56,520
potential for the
copper, plus 2 two

67
00:03:56,520 --> 00:04:02,500
electrons to copper solid
reaction, plus 0.3402 volts.

68
00:04:02,500 --> 00:04:04,980
So now clicker
question, why don't you

69
00:04:04,980 --> 00:04:08,790
calculate for me what
the cell potential is

70
00:04:08,790 --> 00:04:10,370
for this type of cell.

71
00:04:24,150 --> 00:04:25,600
So 10 more seconds.

72
00:04:40,880 --> 00:04:43,220
81%, that's right.

73
00:04:43,220 --> 00:04:46,980
So let's take a look
at that over here.

74
00:04:46,980 --> 00:04:52,520
So the correct answer involves
putting the standard reduction

75
00:04:52,520 --> 00:04:56,510
potential for the reaction
at the cathode with the sign,

76
00:04:56,510 --> 00:04:59,750
without changing it
as plus over here,

77
00:04:59,750 --> 00:05:04,020
0.3402, and then it's minus.

78
00:05:04,020 --> 00:05:06,680
And then you put the standard
reduction potential in there,

79
00:05:06,680 --> 00:05:10,490
and this is a minus
value minus, 0.7628.

80
00:05:10,490 --> 00:05:14,210
And minus a minus we get
a plus, and so our answer

81
00:05:14,210 --> 00:05:18,110
is 1.103 volts.

82
00:05:18,110 --> 00:05:21,430
And this is very
important, and it's

83
00:05:21,430 --> 00:05:24,000
important to think
about the reaction

84
00:05:24,000 --> 00:05:26,440
at the cathode, which
is the copper reaction.

85
00:05:26,440 --> 00:05:28,900
The reaction at the anode
is the zinc reaction.

86
00:05:28,900 --> 00:05:33,070
And a lot of people who try
to be too clever with these.

87
00:05:33,070 --> 00:05:38,440
And they're like,
OK, but this one's

88
00:05:38,440 --> 00:05:40,780
the one that's being oxidized,
so I'll switch the sign

89
00:05:40,780 --> 00:05:44,000
and then put it in the equation
and end up getting it wrong.

90
00:05:44,000 --> 00:05:47,620
So if you always remember
standard reduction potential

91
00:05:47,620 --> 00:05:50,770
put here-- standard reduction
potential put here--

92
00:05:50,770 --> 00:05:54,410
the equation already takes
care of the sign issue for you,

93
00:05:54,410 --> 00:05:56,140
so don't do anything
with the sign.

94
00:05:56,140 --> 00:05:59,710
Other people say, I looked
through pages and pages

95
00:05:59,710 --> 00:06:03,055
of these potentials in
the book, and the reaction

96
00:06:03,055 --> 00:06:04,930
I'm looking for isn't
listed, because they're

97
00:06:04,930 --> 00:06:06,940
looking for an oxidation.

98
00:06:06,940 --> 00:06:08,980
They're not going to
find the reaction written

99
00:06:08,980 --> 00:06:13,420
as an oxidation in a table
of reduction potentials.

100
00:06:13,420 --> 00:06:17,030
So all of these are listed
as reduction potentials.

101
00:06:17,030 --> 00:06:18,370
That's what you will find.

102
00:06:18,370 --> 00:06:20,830
The trick is to remember
which is happening

103
00:06:20,830 --> 00:06:23,560
at the cathode, which is
happening at the anode,

104
00:06:23,560 --> 00:06:26,012
and then you will always
get this problem right.

105
00:06:26,012 --> 00:06:27,970
And it's good to get this
right, because as you

106
00:06:27,970 --> 00:06:30,100
will see later on,
this can be step

107
00:06:30,100 --> 00:06:32,297
one in a multi-part problem.

108
00:06:34,840 --> 00:06:38,200
So when we
successfully calculated

109
00:06:38,200 --> 00:06:42,940
delta E of the cell, the cell
potential, then we can ask,

110
00:06:42,940 --> 00:06:46,570
is the flow of electrons going
to be spontaneous for this?

111
00:06:46,570 --> 00:06:48,520
Will it?

112
00:06:48,520 --> 00:06:49,930
It will be.

113
00:06:49,930 --> 00:06:53,920
And the way we know that is
that we can always come back

114
00:06:53,920 --> 00:06:56,800
to delta G. So whenever
you're asked if something

115
00:06:56,800 --> 00:06:59,917
is spontaneous or not, you
always want to think delta G.

116
00:06:59,917 --> 00:07:01,250
That's what I'm going to go for.

117
00:07:01,250 --> 00:07:03,070
I'm going to think
about delta G.

118
00:07:03,070 --> 00:07:06,750
So here delta G equals minus n,
number of moles of electrons,

119
00:07:06,750 --> 00:07:10,100
Faraday's constant, times
that cell potential.

120
00:07:10,100 --> 00:07:13,960
So if the cell
potential is positive,

121
00:07:13,960 --> 00:07:16,510
delta G will be negative.

122
00:07:16,510 --> 00:07:19,998
And is a reaction spontaneous
when delta G is negative?

123
00:07:23,740 --> 00:07:24,850
It's easy to answer.

124
00:07:24,850 --> 00:07:26,230
It's on my shirt today.

125
00:07:26,230 --> 00:07:28,450
I'm giving it all the way-- yes.

126
00:07:28,450 --> 00:07:31,150
So when delta G is
negative, then you

127
00:07:31,150 --> 00:07:32,620
can be feeling spontaneous.

128
00:07:32,620 --> 00:07:35,180
It's a spontaneous reaction.

129
00:07:35,180 --> 00:07:38,200
So delta E positive
means delta G negative.

130
00:07:38,200 --> 00:07:41,350
Reaction is spontaneous.

131
00:07:41,350 --> 00:07:45,640
So now let's have a
little reminder, review,

132
00:07:45,640 --> 00:07:49,330
of what types of cells
have spontaneous reactions

133
00:07:49,330 --> 00:07:52,890
and what kind involve
non-spontaneous reaction.

134
00:08:03,970 --> 00:08:04,860
10 more seconds.

135
00:08:25,180 --> 00:08:28,000
Can anyone tell me
what the correct name

136
00:08:28,000 --> 00:08:31,930
is of the cell that involves
a non-spontaneous reaction?

137
00:08:31,930 --> 00:08:33,292
Electrolytic cell.

138
00:08:48,970 --> 00:08:54,360
So if we look over here-- so
people knew about the galvanic.

139
00:08:54,360 --> 00:08:55,750
That's good.

140
00:08:55,750 --> 00:08:59,470
So a reaction, if it's a
spontaneous reaction that

141
00:08:59,470 --> 00:09:01,090
will produce an
electric current,

142
00:09:01,090 --> 00:09:03,190
that's called a galvanic cell.

143
00:09:03,190 --> 00:09:05,620
If it's a non-spontaneous
reaction that

144
00:09:05,620 --> 00:09:08,440
has to be driven by
applying a current,

145
00:09:08,440 --> 00:09:10,690
that's called an
electrolytic cell.

146
00:09:10,690 --> 00:09:14,440
So I just threw up
another random name

147
00:09:14,440 --> 00:09:17,470
to see if people
would go for it.

148
00:09:17,470 --> 00:09:20,750
So it's important to
keep these in mind,

149
00:09:20,750 --> 00:09:24,450
because a lot of the problems
will say things like,

150
00:09:24,450 --> 00:09:26,470
in this galvanic cell.

151
00:09:26,470 --> 00:09:28,780
And you seem like you don't
have enough information

152
00:09:28,780 --> 00:09:31,840
to solve the problem because
the problem didn't tell you

153
00:09:31,840 --> 00:09:34,590
which reaction was at the
anode or which reaction was

154
00:09:34,590 --> 00:09:35,360
that the cathode.

155
00:09:35,360 --> 00:09:36,790
So how do you do the problem?

156
00:09:36,790 --> 00:09:40,350
Well, the fact they told
you it was a galvanic cell,

157
00:09:40,350 --> 00:09:44,350
there's only one way to
put the reactions in order

158
00:09:44,350 --> 00:09:45,997
for it to be spontaneous.

159
00:09:45,997 --> 00:09:47,830
So that's part of the
problem-- figuring out

160
00:09:47,830 --> 00:09:49,480
which is at the
anode and which is

161
00:09:49,480 --> 00:09:52,180
at the cathode based
on the fact that it has

162
00:09:52,180 --> 00:09:54,200
to be a spontaneous reaction.

163
00:09:54,200 --> 00:09:56,200
So knowing these terms
is really important.

164
00:09:56,200 --> 00:09:57,955
It's hard to do the
problems without them.

165
00:10:00,470 --> 00:10:05,780
Summary of this part, then, so
a cell operate spontaneously.

166
00:10:05,780 --> 00:10:07,760
Whether it does or
not can be determined

167
00:10:07,760 --> 00:10:10,220
by your cell potential.

168
00:10:10,220 --> 00:10:11,960
If it's positive,
it's spontaneous.

169
00:10:11,960 --> 00:10:15,800
And that's because if it's
positive, delta G is negative.

170
00:10:15,800 --> 00:10:19,730
And delta G is really what
tells you about spontaneity.

171
00:10:19,730 --> 00:10:22,550
And you can calculate
your cell potential

172
00:10:22,550 --> 00:10:25,520
from your standard
reduction potentials

173
00:10:25,520 --> 00:10:28,580
that you will find in your book.

174
00:10:28,580 --> 00:10:30,590
So now let's think
about the meaning

175
00:10:30,590 --> 00:10:32,390
of the standard
reduction potential.

176
00:10:32,390 --> 00:10:34,410
What's true if it's a
large positive value?

177
00:10:34,410 --> 00:10:38,300
What's true if it is a
large negative value?

178
00:10:38,300 --> 00:10:40,820
We can look at these
values and know something

179
00:10:40,820 --> 00:10:42,710
about the reactions.

180
00:10:42,710 --> 00:10:46,520
So meaning of standard reduction
potentials-- what do the values

181
00:10:46,520 --> 00:10:47,750
tell us?

182
00:10:47,750 --> 00:10:51,800
So a large positive
standard reduction potential

183
00:10:51,800 --> 00:10:55,460
means that the element
is easy to reduce.

184
00:10:55,460 --> 00:10:57,800
So let's look at an example.

185
00:10:57,800 --> 00:11:03,050
So we have fluorine F2
gas plus two electrons

186
00:11:03,050 --> 00:11:07,190
going 2 fluorine minus ions.

187
00:11:07,190 --> 00:11:09,870
And this has a standard
reduction potential

188
00:11:09,870 --> 00:11:13,340
of plus 2.87 volts.

189
00:11:13,340 --> 00:11:17,120
So large positive
number means that it's

190
00:11:17,120 --> 00:11:19,320
easy to add electrons.

191
00:11:19,320 --> 00:11:21,170
And we can think about
this in terms of what

192
00:11:21,170 --> 00:11:23,220
we know about these reactions.

193
00:11:23,220 --> 00:11:26,635
So again, if it's a positive
standard reduction potential,

194
00:11:26,635 --> 00:11:29,390
E0, that's going to
mean a negative delta

195
00:11:29,390 --> 00:11:31,910
G for this reaction
as written, written

196
00:11:31,910 --> 00:11:33,830
as the reduction reaction.

197
00:11:33,830 --> 00:11:37,200
And so it's favorable or
spontaneous in that direction.

198
00:11:37,200 --> 00:11:40,250
So the reduction is
spontaneous or favorable.

199
00:11:40,250 --> 00:11:42,710
So when you have a large
positive value here,

200
00:11:42,710 --> 00:11:46,550
you can think about, yes,
fluorine wants those electrons.

201
00:11:46,550 --> 00:11:50,986
It spontaneously will grab those
electrons and become F-minus.

202
00:11:50,986 --> 00:11:52,610
And this also makes
sense to you if you

203
00:11:52,610 --> 00:11:54,920
think about your
periodic table trends.

204
00:11:54,920 --> 00:11:57,770
You have fluorine
wants to be F-minus.

205
00:11:57,770 --> 00:11:59,990
It will have its noble
gas configuration then.

206
00:11:59,990 --> 00:12:02,280
It likes getting
an extra electron.

207
00:12:02,280 --> 00:12:04,700
So this should make
sense from other things

208
00:12:04,700 --> 00:12:06,290
that we've talked about.

209
00:12:06,290 --> 00:12:09,050
So now I could ask the question,
and I will, and it's a clicker

210
00:12:09,050 --> 00:12:13,240
question, does that make F2 a
good oxidizing agent or not?

211
00:12:25,540 --> 00:12:26,340
10 more seconds.

212
00:12:44,200 --> 00:12:46,920
So the answer is yes.

213
00:12:46,920 --> 00:12:50,740
F2 is easy to reduce, which
makes it a good oxidizing

214
00:12:50,740 --> 00:12:51,460
agent.

215
00:12:51,460 --> 00:12:54,040
Remember, it's an
agent of oxidation.

216
00:12:54,040 --> 00:12:58,210
It wants to go out there
and oxidize other things.

217
00:12:58,210 --> 00:13:00,580
It wants to itself be reduced.

218
00:13:00,580 --> 00:13:02,860
So something that's a
good oxidizing agent

219
00:13:02,860 --> 00:13:03,940
is easy to reduce.

220
00:13:03,940 --> 00:13:05,140
It wants to be reduced.

221
00:13:05,140 --> 00:13:08,230
It wants to be an
agent of oxidation,

222
00:13:08,230 --> 00:13:11,020
bringing oxidation to the world.

223
00:13:11,020 --> 00:13:12,280
So it's easy to reduce.

224
00:13:12,280 --> 00:13:15,380
It's a good oxidizing agent.

225
00:13:15,380 --> 00:13:18,870
So in general, you can think
about this the following way.

226
00:13:18,870 --> 00:13:21,870
Let's just like bring the
noise down a little bit.

227
00:13:21,870 --> 00:13:24,340
I know it's a clicker
competition day.

228
00:13:24,340 --> 00:13:27,970
So we have a large positive
value here for a reaction.

229
00:13:27,970 --> 00:13:31,090
For a reduction reaction
is written large positive

230
00:13:31,090 --> 00:13:34,000
standard reduction potential.

231
00:13:34,000 --> 00:13:37,500
And the couple
here, F2 to F-minus

232
00:13:37,500 --> 00:13:39,580
is the couple we're
talking about.

233
00:13:39,580 --> 00:13:42,520
And we'll say that the
oxidized species of that couple

234
00:13:42,520 --> 00:13:44,500
is very oxidizing.

235
00:13:44,500 --> 00:13:47,912
And again, F2 here is
the oxidized species.

236
00:13:50,950 --> 00:13:54,970
So the oxidized species F2
is a good oxidizing agent.

237
00:13:54,970 --> 00:13:58,900
It's very oxidizing because
it has a large positive

238
00:13:58,900 --> 00:14:02,120
standard reduction potential.

239
00:14:02,120 --> 00:14:04,510
So I don't know how
well this copied.

240
00:14:04,510 --> 00:14:07,420
But here are some standard
reduction potentials.

241
00:14:07,420 --> 00:14:11,560
They're all in your book, so
it's OK if they look terrible.

242
00:14:11,560 --> 00:14:13,840
But the important point
here is that the top.

243
00:14:13,840 --> 00:14:16,236
We have large positive values.

244
00:14:16,236 --> 00:14:17,860
So if you can see
that in your handout,

245
00:14:17,860 --> 00:14:19,820
this is the reaction
we just talked about,

246
00:14:19,820 --> 00:14:25,060
or the couple we just talked
about-- F2 F-minus and so

247
00:14:25,060 --> 00:14:26,500
large positive.

248
00:14:26,500 --> 00:14:28,360
And then there's a gap here.

249
00:14:28,360 --> 00:14:30,250
There are pages
and pages and pages

250
00:14:30,250 --> 00:14:32,410
of these standard
reduction potentials.

251
00:14:32,410 --> 00:14:36,010
And at the very bottom, you
have a large negative number,

252
00:14:36,010 --> 00:14:39,520
so large positive on the top
large, negative on the bottom.

253
00:14:39,520 --> 00:14:44,830
So at the very top, the
oxidized species of that couple

254
00:14:44,830 --> 00:14:46,930
is very oxidizing.

255
00:14:46,930 --> 00:14:50,980
And we'll see it in a
minute, that at the bottom

256
00:14:50,980 --> 00:14:55,090
the reduced species, when
it's a negative number here,

257
00:14:55,090 --> 00:14:59,010
the reduced species
is very reducing.

258
00:14:59,010 --> 00:15:00,720
So let's look at
the reduced species,

259
00:15:00,720 --> 00:15:03,210
and this is lithium
on the bottom.

260
00:15:03,210 --> 00:15:07,320
So a large negative
standard reduction potential

261
00:15:07,320 --> 00:15:10,110
means that the element
is hard to reduce.

262
00:15:10,110 --> 00:15:13,110
So example, lithium
plus 1 plus 1 electron

263
00:15:13,110 --> 00:15:15,570
going to lithium solid.

264
00:15:15,570 --> 00:15:18,180
The standard reduction
potential for this reaction

265
00:15:18,180 --> 00:15:22,800
is minus 3.045 volts.

266
00:15:22,800 --> 00:15:27,390
So it's hard to add
electrons to lithium-plus.

267
00:15:27,390 --> 00:15:30,730
We have a negative standard
reduction potential,

268
00:15:30,730 --> 00:15:33,330
which means a positive
delta G for the reaction

269
00:15:33,330 --> 00:15:35,450
is written for the
reduction reaction.

270
00:15:35,450 --> 00:15:36,390
So it's not favorable.

271
00:15:36,390 --> 00:15:39,280
Lithium-plus does
not want electrons.

272
00:15:39,280 --> 00:15:41,640
It doesn't want to
go to lithium solid.

273
00:15:41,640 --> 00:15:44,790
So lithium-plus, if
it loses an electron,

274
00:15:44,790 --> 00:15:47,340
it gets its nice noble
gas configuration.

275
00:15:47,340 --> 00:15:48,570
It's a group-one element.

276
00:15:48,570 --> 00:15:52,800
It likes to be in the
plus-1 oxidation state.

277
00:15:52,800 --> 00:15:55,410
It doesn't want to be reduced.

278
00:15:55,410 --> 00:16:00,960
So is lithium plus 1 a
good oxidizing agent?

279
00:16:00,960 --> 00:16:02,730
No, it's not.

280
00:16:02,730 --> 00:16:04,440
It does not want to be reduced.

281
00:16:04,440 --> 00:16:10,920
But lithium solid is
a good reducing agent.

282
00:16:10,920 --> 00:16:13,530
It's a good reducing
agent because it

283
00:16:13,530 --> 00:16:15,270
wants to reduce other things.

284
00:16:15,270 --> 00:16:19,380
It wants to itself
become oxidized.

285
00:16:19,380 --> 00:16:22,680
So lithium solid will
reduce other things.

286
00:16:22,680 --> 00:16:25,020
Lithium solid wants
to be oxidized.

287
00:16:25,020 --> 00:16:29,140
It wants to be lithium plus 1.

288
00:16:29,140 --> 00:16:33,540
So the rule here for those
large, negative standard

289
00:16:33,540 --> 00:16:37,220
reduction potential
couples is that

290
00:16:37,220 --> 00:16:39,480
with a large negative
standard reduction

291
00:16:39,480 --> 00:16:43,830
potential, the reduced
species is very reducing.

292
00:16:43,830 --> 00:16:46,470
The reduced species
here is lithium.

293
00:16:46,470 --> 00:16:50,580
So lithium is reduced
compared to lithium plus 1.

294
00:16:50,580 --> 00:16:53,480
This, then, is very reducing.

295
00:16:53,480 --> 00:16:56,220
It is a good reducing agent.

296
00:16:56,220 --> 00:17:01,110
Do you think lithium plus 1
would be a good reducing agent?

297
00:17:01,110 --> 00:17:01,860
What do you think?

298
00:17:05,510 --> 00:17:07,894
So if it was a good
reducing agent,

299
00:17:07,894 --> 00:17:10,819
it wants to reduce other
things and become oxidized.

300
00:17:10,819 --> 00:17:14,970
Do you think lithium
plus 2 is a good thing?

301
00:17:14,970 --> 00:17:15,980
No.

302
00:17:15,980 --> 00:17:20,270
So again, in this couple,
it's the reduced species

303
00:17:20,270 --> 00:17:21,920
that's very reducing.

304
00:17:21,920 --> 00:17:24,619
And so you have to think
about this a little bit.

305
00:17:24,619 --> 00:17:26,599
Make sure that you
pick the right one.

306
00:17:26,599 --> 00:17:29,830
Often you'll ask
about rank the order

307
00:17:29,830 --> 00:17:32,420
of these as reducing agents.

308
00:17:32,420 --> 00:17:34,970
And people remember
this, but don't

309
00:17:34,970 --> 00:17:36,979
remember which
species of the couple

310
00:17:36,979 --> 00:17:38,270
is going to be doing the thing.

311
00:17:38,270 --> 00:17:40,250
So think about what's happening.

312
00:17:40,250 --> 00:17:43,790
Lithium solid, does it want
to become lithium plus 1?

313
00:17:43,790 --> 00:17:44,420
It sure does.

314
00:17:44,420 --> 00:17:46,940
Does lithium plus 1 want
to become lithium plus 2?

315
00:17:46,940 --> 00:17:48,710
No.

316
00:17:48,710 --> 00:17:50,770
So again, back to
just our table just

317
00:17:50,770 --> 00:17:54,650
for a second, on the top-- large
positive, oxidized species very

318
00:17:54,650 --> 00:18:00,572
oxidizing, negative value,
reduced species very reducing.

319
00:18:00,572 --> 00:18:02,030
And now if we look
at this, I don't

320
00:18:02,030 --> 00:18:03,821
know how well this came
out in your handout

321
00:18:03,821 --> 00:18:06,800
either, but part of
the periodic table

322
00:18:06,800 --> 00:18:08,660
for you kind of compressed.

323
00:18:08,660 --> 00:18:13,780
Over here we have fluorine,
large positive, standard

324
00:18:13,780 --> 00:18:17,350
reduction potential,
easy to reduce over here,

325
00:18:17,350 --> 00:18:19,250
good oxidizing agents.

326
00:18:19,250 --> 00:18:21,470
If they get an electron,
if they're reduced,

327
00:18:21,470 --> 00:18:23,750
they get their noble
gas configuration.

328
00:18:23,750 --> 00:18:27,500
Over here, we have these
big negative numbers,

329
00:18:27,500 --> 00:18:32,930
easy to oxidize the solid or
the neutral to their plus 1.

330
00:18:32,930 --> 00:18:35,379
So they would be
good reducing agents.

331
00:18:35,379 --> 00:18:37,670
And so this all makes sense
when you think about trends

332
00:18:37,670 --> 00:18:40,250
in the periodic table.

333
00:18:40,250 --> 00:18:45,290
So today we're going to have
two examples of why all of this

334
00:18:45,290 --> 00:18:48,950
is important across disciplines.

335
00:18:48,950 --> 00:18:52,030
So often these units
are really talked--

336
00:18:52,030 --> 00:18:55,670
you talk about making
batteries and things like that.

337
00:18:55,670 --> 00:18:56,870
And that is important.

338
00:18:56,870 --> 00:18:59,600
In fact, with
energy initiatives,

339
00:18:59,600 --> 00:19:02,421
making batteries is a
really hot area right now.

340
00:19:02,421 --> 00:19:03,920
But all these things
you're learning

341
00:19:03,920 --> 00:19:08,220
are also related to biology
and to medicine as well.

342
00:19:08,220 --> 00:19:11,770
And so we have one more of the
"In Their Own Words" segment.

343
00:19:11,770 --> 00:19:17,510
And John Essigmann studies DNA
damage as related to cancer.

344
00:19:17,510 --> 00:19:21,500
And people are like, what
is DNA damage and cancer

345
00:19:21,500 --> 00:19:23,990
have to do with oxidation
reduction potentials?

346
00:19:23,990 --> 00:19:26,600
But it's not all about
oxidation reduction.

347
00:19:26,600 --> 00:19:29,150
That's what a lot
of the damage is.

348
00:19:29,150 --> 00:19:32,570
So why don't you hear
from John Essigmann.

349
00:19:39,620 --> 00:19:40,860
[VIDEO PLAYBACK]

350
00:19:40,860 --> 00:19:42,200
- My name's John Essigmann.

351
00:19:42,200 --> 00:19:43,770
I'm in the Department
of Chemistry

352
00:19:43,770 --> 00:19:46,000
and Biological Engineering MIT.

353
00:19:46,000 --> 00:19:49,800
I'm a toxicologist by training,
so I study how cells respond

354
00:19:49,800 --> 00:19:52,790
to toxins, and in particular,
the kinds of toxins

355
00:19:52,790 --> 00:19:56,637
that cause nucleic acid damage.

356
00:19:56,637 --> 00:19:58,970
Some of these are chemicals
from out in the environment,

357
00:19:58,970 --> 00:20:01,190
organic compounds,
that cause DNA damage.

358
00:20:01,190 --> 00:20:05,240
But I'm also interested in
how chemicals inside our body,

359
00:20:05,240 --> 00:20:07,075
for example, reactive
forms of oxygen,

360
00:20:07,075 --> 00:20:12,870
the molecule that we breathe,
also cause nucleic acid damage.

361
00:20:12,870 --> 00:20:14,760
Oxidation is the
process by which

362
00:20:14,760 --> 00:20:17,680
we convert our metabolic
fuels into energy.

363
00:20:17,680 --> 00:20:21,210
This is a gummy bear being
oxidized by potassium chlorate.

364
00:20:21,210 --> 00:20:23,720
This is exactly the kind
of chemical reaction

365
00:20:23,720 --> 00:20:25,190
that goes on in your bodies.

366
00:20:25,190 --> 00:20:29,210
But in your body, it goes
on at a much lower rate.

367
00:20:29,210 --> 00:20:33,230
Oxygen is a double-edged sword.

368
00:20:33,230 --> 00:20:37,530
There are two aspects to
its use that is good for us.

369
00:20:41,370 --> 00:20:44,545
The first one is by acting
as an electron acceptor,

370
00:20:44,545 --> 00:20:47,070
sort of like an
anode in a battery,

371
00:20:47,070 --> 00:20:48,930
it completes the
circuit and allows

372
00:20:48,930 --> 00:20:52,560
us to be able to generate
free energy that we can

373
00:20:52,560 --> 00:20:55,280
use to power vital processes.

374
00:20:55,280 --> 00:20:57,060
That's good.

375
00:20:57,060 --> 00:21:01,890
The second good thing is
that it's the ammunition

376
00:21:01,890 --> 00:21:03,540
of our innate immune system.

377
00:21:03,540 --> 00:21:06,810
[COUGHING]

378
00:21:06,810 --> 00:21:10,080
Oxygen is used to
charge the system

379
00:21:10,080 --> 00:21:14,640
to produce one, two, or three
electron-reduced species

380
00:21:14,640 --> 00:21:17,950
that themselves can react
with reactive nitrogen species

381
00:21:17,950 --> 00:21:24,260
to create a host of
very damaging oxidants.

382
00:21:24,260 --> 00:21:27,120
Our innate immune system
uses these to protect us

383
00:21:27,120 --> 00:21:30,330
against invaders
and oftentimes, we

384
00:21:30,330 --> 00:21:34,730
believe, developing
cancer cells.

385
00:21:34,730 --> 00:21:37,970
The bad thing is that the
second system I described

386
00:21:37,970 --> 00:21:41,700
doesn't have a lot
of accuracy in how it

387
00:21:41,700 --> 00:21:44,250
focuses that chemical warfare.

388
00:21:44,250 --> 00:21:46,740
So not only are the,
let's say, invading

389
00:21:46,740 --> 00:21:49,620
bacterial cells or
the cancer cells hit,

390
00:21:49,620 --> 00:21:52,200
but surrounding cells as well.

391
00:21:52,200 --> 00:21:54,710
And that creates
oxidative damage

392
00:21:54,710 --> 00:21:58,970
in the genomes of those cells,
those innocent bystanders.

393
00:21:58,970 --> 00:22:02,540
If those cells divide, the
oxidative damage that's in them

394
00:22:02,540 --> 00:22:07,335
can cause mutations, and that
sets the cell along a path.

395
00:22:07,335 --> 00:22:11,349
If you accumulate enough
mutations in enough genes,

396
00:22:11,349 --> 00:22:13,015
you're going to convert
that normal cell

397
00:22:13,015 --> 00:22:15,980
into a cancer cell that
will grow out into a tumor.

398
00:22:20,267 --> 00:22:20,850
[END PLAYBACK]

399
00:22:20,850 --> 00:22:22,900
CATHERINE DRENNAN: So
that was one of, I think,

400
00:22:22,900 --> 00:22:26,100
the only video, besides mine,
that involved a faculty member.

401
00:22:26,100 --> 00:22:28,150
But I thought it's
nice to have a sort

402
00:22:28,150 --> 00:22:30,880
of a collection of
different folks talking

403
00:22:30,880 --> 00:22:32,230
about their research.

404
00:22:32,230 --> 00:22:35,410
And this relates to
free radical species

405
00:22:35,410 --> 00:22:39,670
as well as to oxidation
and reduction.

406
00:22:39,670 --> 00:22:42,820
So now I have another bio
example, which hopefully we'll

407
00:22:42,820 --> 00:22:44,120
get to at the end.

408
00:22:44,120 --> 00:22:47,200
But I want to introduce
a very important equation

409
00:22:47,200 --> 00:22:49,530
for this unit and
oxidation reduction, which

410
00:22:49,530 --> 00:22:51,350
is the Nernst equation.

411
00:22:51,350 --> 00:22:55,240
So here, and this happens,
I think, to all of us

412
00:22:55,240 --> 00:22:59,410
all the time-- our
exhausted batteries.

413
00:22:59,410 --> 00:23:01,450
So when you have
a battery or you

414
00:23:01,450 --> 00:23:05,090
go to turn on your headphones
or use your laser pointer

415
00:23:05,090 --> 00:23:08,030
or things like that and the
battery doesn't work anymore,

416
00:23:08,030 --> 00:23:11,500
it's because the cell reaction
has reached equilibrium.

417
00:23:11,500 --> 00:23:14,380
So equilibrium is a
state of calmness.

418
00:23:14,380 --> 00:23:17,950
It's also a state of
batteries not working anymore.

419
00:23:17,950 --> 00:23:23,790
And so at this point,
when it's at equilibrium,

420
00:23:23,790 --> 00:23:26,170
the cell generates
zero potential

421
00:23:26,170 --> 00:23:27,430
across its electrodes.

422
00:23:27,430 --> 00:23:29,500
It's not working anymore.

423
00:23:29,500 --> 00:23:31,390
It is a dead battery.

424
00:23:31,390 --> 00:23:35,200
And we need to think about
when it reaches equilibrium,

425
00:23:35,200 --> 00:23:38,110
what state it's in at
any given time compared

426
00:23:38,110 --> 00:23:39,717
to its equilibrium state.

427
00:23:39,717 --> 00:23:41,800
So this really brings us
back to some of the ideas

428
00:23:41,800 --> 00:23:44,310
that we had in the
chemical equilibrium unit,

429
00:23:44,310 --> 00:23:47,800
where we were thinking about
composition of a reaction

430
00:23:47,800 --> 00:23:51,860
at any given time compared
to the equilibrium state.

431
00:23:51,860 --> 00:23:58,030
So how does cell potential
change with cell composition?

432
00:23:58,030 --> 00:24:00,060
So again, we know
a lot about this.

433
00:24:00,060 --> 00:24:04,080
And exam three on Friday
has equilibrium on it.

434
00:24:04,080 --> 00:24:07,810
So we already know a lot about
what happens in relationships

435
00:24:07,810 --> 00:24:10,490
between equilibrium.

436
00:24:10,490 --> 00:24:14,110
And we know that delta G
changes as the composition

437
00:24:14,110 --> 00:24:15,700
changes in the cell.

438
00:24:15,700 --> 00:24:18,330
And until equilibrium
is reached-- so again,

439
00:24:18,330 --> 00:24:20,920
reactions going forward
and back in equilibrium--

440
00:24:20,920 --> 00:24:23,070
the forward direction equals
the reverse direction.

441
00:24:23,070 --> 00:24:27,030
But at some given time that
is not always the case.

442
00:24:27,030 --> 00:24:30,940
So the equation that
we know from before is

443
00:24:30,940 --> 00:24:36,370
that delta G equals delta
G0 plus RT natural log of Q.

444
00:24:36,370 --> 00:24:39,050
And so if you know
delta G and Q,

445
00:24:39,050 --> 00:24:41,140
you can talk about what
the delta G is going

446
00:24:41,140 --> 00:24:44,580
to be at a particular
composition of the cell

447
00:24:44,580 --> 00:24:49,480
with a particular
value of Q. So now we

448
00:24:49,480 --> 00:24:53,140
can think, well, OK, here's what
we know about Q, that reaction

449
00:24:53,140 --> 00:24:55,210
quotient, and delta G.

450
00:24:55,210 --> 00:25:00,490
What do we know about delta
G and E, the cell potential?

451
00:25:00,490 --> 00:25:02,300
And we just talked about that.

452
00:25:02,300 --> 00:25:04,960
So we know that delta
G0 equals minus n,

453
00:25:04,960 --> 00:25:06,370
the number of
moles of electrons,

454
00:25:06,370 --> 00:25:09,470
Faraday's constant times
that cell potential.

455
00:25:09,470 --> 00:25:12,120
So now we can do a
rearrangement of terms.

456
00:25:12,120 --> 00:25:16,180
We can combine and come up
with the Nernst equation.

457
00:25:16,180 --> 00:25:17,650
So here are the two equations.

458
00:25:17,650 --> 00:25:18,700
One we knew before.

459
00:25:18,700 --> 00:25:21,220
One we just learned about today.

460
00:25:21,220 --> 00:25:23,280
And we can put those together.

461
00:25:23,280 --> 00:25:27,490
We can plug in for delta
G here without the 0,

462
00:25:27,490 --> 00:25:30,400
and for delta G0
with the 0 over here.

463
00:25:30,400 --> 00:25:33,120
And then we can
divide both sides

464
00:25:33,120 --> 00:25:35,290
by minus the number
of moles of electrons

465
00:25:35,290 --> 00:25:38,980
and Faraday's constant, come
up with the Nernst equation.

466
00:25:38,980 --> 00:25:43,810
So the Nernst equation
compares our cell potential

467
00:25:43,810 --> 00:25:46,620
under standard conditions
with our cell potential

468
00:25:46,620 --> 00:25:52,770
at any given time based on
that reaction quotient Q.

469
00:25:52,770 --> 00:25:56,970
So let's do an example
with the Nernst equation.

470
00:25:56,970 --> 00:26:02,400
So let's calculate the cell
potential at a particular time

471
00:26:02,400 --> 00:26:09,510
when the zinc plus 2 ions are
0.1 and copper plus 2 is 0.0010

472
00:26:09,510 --> 00:26:10,470
molar.

473
00:26:10,470 --> 00:26:13,990
And we're same cell
as we've done before.

474
00:26:13,990 --> 00:26:19,290
So step one, very easy, we want
to calculate the cell potential

475
00:26:19,290 --> 00:26:21,330
under standard conditions.

476
00:26:21,330 --> 00:26:24,210
And this is particularly
easy because we already

477
00:26:24,210 --> 00:26:25,470
did this today.

478
00:26:25,470 --> 00:26:30,930
So you already told me
it's plus 1.103 volts.

479
00:26:30,930 --> 00:26:33,930
So we could look up our
standard reduction potentials

480
00:26:33,930 --> 00:26:37,914
for our copper couple and our
zinc couple and calculate this.

481
00:26:37,914 --> 00:26:39,330
So we already did
this, and that's

482
00:26:39,330 --> 00:26:41,540
why I said you want to make
sure you get this right

483
00:26:41,540 --> 00:26:44,730
because it's often just step
one of a multi-part problem.

484
00:26:44,730 --> 00:26:47,140
So we want to get that right.

485
00:26:47,140 --> 00:26:51,748
Step two is calculating Q, and
this is a clicker question.

486
00:27:14,250 --> 00:27:15,170
10 more seconds.

487
00:27:31,410 --> 00:27:34,640
I tried to make the
math not that hard.

488
00:27:34,640 --> 00:27:40,240
So Q, products over reactants,
so one thing you want to do

489
00:27:40,240 --> 00:27:43,070
is make sure you have the
reaction written correctly.

490
00:27:43,070 --> 00:27:46,810
So you know what the products
are and what the reactants are.

491
00:27:46,810 --> 00:27:50,680
And here we have the
zinc ions over copper.

492
00:27:50,680 --> 00:27:53,860
Copper solid and
zinc solid don't

493
00:27:53,860 --> 00:27:56,740
appear in the
equilibrium expression

494
00:27:56,740 --> 00:27:59,350
or in the Q expression
also because they're solids

495
00:27:59,350 --> 00:28:01,810
and their concentration
is not changing.

496
00:28:01,810 --> 00:28:03,640
So there is enough
information that

497
00:28:03,640 --> 00:28:06,790
was given because we
don't include the solids.

498
00:28:06,790 --> 00:28:10,870
So it's just the
concentration of zinc ions

499
00:28:10,870 --> 00:28:15,598
over the concentration of copper
ions, or 1.0 times 10 to the 2.

500
00:28:17,830 --> 00:28:20,350
Now we need to know n.

501
00:28:20,350 --> 00:28:22,990
So n is the number of
moles of electrons that

502
00:28:22,990 --> 00:28:25,060
are involved in this reaction.

503
00:28:25,060 --> 00:28:27,625
This reaction involves
how many electrons?

504
00:28:31,650 --> 00:28:33,210
How many?

505
00:28:33,210 --> 00:28:35,330
It involves two, right.

506
00:28:35,330 --> 00:28:41,490
So the zinc to zinc plus
2, copper plus 2 to copper,

507
00:28:41,490 --> 00:28:43,590
so it involves two electrons.

508
00:28:43,590 --> 00:28:47,370
So this is two, and sometimes
you can just look at this

509
00:28:47,370 --> 00:28:50,040
and realize it's two
electrons involved.

510
00:28:50,040 --> 00:28:52,500
Other times you have
to balance the reaction

511
00:28:52,500 --> 00:28:56,710
to figure out how many
electrons are involved.

512
00:28:56,710 --> 00:28:59,730
It's not obvious by
looking at the reaction.

513
00:28:59,730 --> 00:29:01,980
This is a simple one,
but some of them are not.

514
00:29:01,980 --> 00:29:05,170
So that's we're balancing
reactions comes in handy.

515
00:29:05,170 --> 00:29:05,670
so

516
00:29:05,670 --> 00:29:07,500
Now we have everything
we need to plug it

517
00:29:07,500 --> 00:29:09,360
into the Nernst equation.

518
00:29:09,360 --> 00:29:10,860
So we can put it in.

519
00:29:10,860 --> 00:29:15,320
We calculated this
standard cell potential

520
00:29:15,320 --> 00:29:20,130
over here, the plus 1.1 value.

521
00:29:20,130 --> 00:29:24,870
We can look up R. Everything,
again, room temperature.

522
00:29:24,870 --> 00:29:27,720
Natural log of Q,
we calculated Q.

523
00:29:27,720 --> 00:29:31,230
We have two electrons
and Faraday's constant.

524
00:29:31,230 --> 00:29:36,180
And we can multiply this
out, get this value.

525
00:29:36,180 --> 00:29:39,880
In terms of significant figures,
this also is a lot of fun.

526
00:29:39,880 --> 00:29:43,260
We have log rules of significant
figures, multiplication

527
00:29:43,260 --> 00:29:45,270
and division rules of
significant figures,

528
00:29:45,270 --> 00:29:49,740
and adding and subtracting
rules of significant figures,

529
00:29:49,740 --> 00:29:51,450
and also in terms of units.

530
00:29:51,450 --> 00:29:54,060
All of a sudden, volts appeared.

531
00:29:54,060 --> 00:29:56,310
That was nice because our
answer should be in volts.

532
00:29:56,310 --> 00:29:58,320
But where did they come from?

533
00:29:58,320 --> 00:30:02,220
So we had our kelvins
are going to cancel out.

534
00:30:02,220 --> 00:30:06,000
But we have joules over here.

535
00:30:06,000 --> 00:30:07,170
And we have coulombs.

536
00:30:07,170 --> 00:30:10,260
But luckily, a joule per
coulomb equals a volt.

537
00:30:10,260 --> 00:30:14,740
So we're all set to get
our appropriate units.

538
00:30:14,740 --> 00:30:17,190
So just a couple of things
that I'll mention about this as

539
00:30:17,190 --> 00:30:20,160
well-- sine almost
all these problems are

540
00:30:20,160 --> 00:30:22,650
at room temperature, I
try to make your lives

541
00:30:22,650 --> 00:30:28,020
a little bit easier on the
exam and multiply this out

542
00:30:28,020 --> 00:30:30,360
for you, because these
are all constants,

543
00:30:30,360 --> 00:30:32,100
and they're big
constants that involve

544
00:30:32,100 --> 00:30:34,410
plugging a lot of numbers in.

545
00:30:34,410 --> 00:30:39,030
So I will give you
this combined value.

546
00:30:39,030 --> 00:30:42,480
And if you use log
instead of natural log,

547
00:30:42,480 --> 00:30:45,850
you need to change
that value here.

548
00:30:45,850 --> 00:30:48,600
And so what I actually
put on equation sheets

549
00:30:48,600 --> 00:30:50,120
are these equations.

550
00:30:50,120 --> 00:30:53,940
I'll also put the full
equation there as well but just

551
00:30:53,940 --> 00:30:56,560
to make your lives
a little bit easier.

552
00:30:56,560 --> 00:31:00,150
It's horrible to make
mistakes up there.

553
00:31:00,150 --> 00:31:06,720
So just briefly, what about at
equilibrium, what does Q equal?

554
00:31:06,720 --> 00:31:13,180
Q equals K. Delta G equals 0.

555
00:31:13,180 --> 00:31:17,940
And so we can rewrite
this expression again,

556
00:31:17,940 --> 00:31:19,950
which we've done before.

557
00:31:19,950 --> 00:31:25,820
And if we take this and
look at this expression now,

558
00:31:25,820 --> 00:31:27,590
we can again combine
these-- we have

559
00:31:27,590 --> 00:31:33,700
two expressions for delta G0--
and combine them and solve.

560
00:31:33,700 --> 00:31:36,410
And you can see
that you can also

561
00:31:36,410 --> 00:31:41,230
calculate K from standard
reduction potentials.

562
00:31:41,230 --> 00:31:45,190
So all the things that we
have been learning here,

563
00:31:45,190 --> 00:31:48,560
we can always come back
to chemical equilibrium.

564
00:31:48,560 --> 00:31:51,960
So I'm done with everything
but my second bio example.

565
00:31:51,960 --> 00:31:54,490
So you'll have to
wait until next week

566
00:31:54,490 --> 00:31:58,376
to find out how vitamin B12
gets reduced in the body.

567
00:32:10,370 --> 00:32:13,200
Let's just take 10 more seconds
on the clicker question.

568
00:32:36,250 --> 00:32:39,310
Does someone want a
nice T-shirt to tell me

569
00:32:39,310 --> 00:32:40,602
how they got the right answer?

570
00:32:48,520 --> 00:32:49,587
Pass this back.

571
00:32:52,330 --> 00:32:54,980
AUDIENCE: So when you're
looking at the Pb--

572
00:32:54,980 --> 00:32:57,000
CATHERINE DRENNAN:
Let's all quiet down.

573
00:32:57,000 --> 00:33:01,430
AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE] and
zinc, zinc is going to reduce--

574
00:33:01,430 --> 00:33:03,711
CATHERINE DRENNAN:
Let's quiet down.

575
00:33:03,711 --> 00:33:07,700
AUDIENCE: --Pb because it
goes from a 2 plus charge

576
00:33:07,700 --> 00:33:09,330
to no charge at all.

577
00:33:09,330 --> 00:33:11,600
So that's reducing its charge.

578
00:33:11,600 --> 00:33:13,690
And then in the
reverse reaction,

579
00:33:13,690 --> 00:33:17,060
Pb does the same
thing to zinc 2 plus

580
00:33:17,060 --> 00:33:22,325
and takes it from 2 plus
to a neutral charge.

581
00:33:22,325 --> 00:33:23,575
CATHERINE DRENNAN: Yep, great.

582
00:33:26,180 --> 00:33:28,670
So the trick to this is
just look at the equations

583
00:33:28,670 --> 00:33:31,310
and figure out what
is being oxidized

584
00:33:31,310 --> 00:33:33,560
and what is being reduced
in both directions.

585
00:33:37,260 --> 00:33:41,370
Oxidation reduction, it's
not just about batteries.

586
00:33:41,370 --> 00:33:43,730
Batteries, of course,
are very important.

587
00:33:43,730 --> 00:33:45,800
There's a lot of active
research right now

588
00:33:45,800 --> 00:33:48,750
in trying to make better
batteries that are more

589
00:33:48,750 --> 00:33:52,980
environmentally friendly, just
solving the energy problem

590
00:33:52,980 --> 00:33:55,770
every single possible way.

591
00:33:55,770 --> 00:33:58,140
But even if you're not
interested in solving

592
00:33:58,140 --> 00:34:00,650
the energy problem,
oxidation reduction

593
00:34:00,650 --> 00:34:02,570
is really important in medicine.

594
00:34:02,570 --> 00:34:05,900
So I'm just going to give you
another bio example for this.

595
00:34:05,900 --> 00:34:09,230
So there's a vitamin in
your body, vitamin B12

596
00:34:09,230 --> 00:34:13,230
It has one of the largest
negative reduction potentials

597
00:34:13,230 --> 00:34:15,679
of any biological molecule.

598
00:34:15,679 --> 00:34:18,710
So we ask the question,
how can something like that

599
00:34:18,710 --> 00:34:20,730
be reduced in the body?

600
00:34:20,730 --> 00:34:22,670
So let me introduce
you to vitamin B12.

601
00:34:22,670 --> 00:34:25,610
You're going to see this
a couple of times today.

602
00:34:25,610 --> 00:34:29,630
So vitamin B12 needs to
be reduced to be active.

603
00:34:29,630 --> 00:34:31,686
But it has a low
reduction potential.

604
00:34:34,230 --> 00:34:35,850
This is the vitamin
B12, and you'll

605
00:34:35,850 --> 00:34:38,060
see several more
views of it, and it's

606
00:34:38,060 --> 00:34:42,620
in pictures in your
handout of today's lecture.

607
00:34:42,620 --> 00:34:45,420
There's an enzyme that requires
vitamin B12 and another B

608
00:34:45,420 --> 00:34:48,060
vitamin called folic acid.

609
00:34:48,060 --> 00:34:51,440
And if this enzyme is
not functioning properly

610
00:34:51,440 --> 00:34:54,030
in your body, it leads
to all sorts of things.

611
00:34:54,030 --> 00:34:56,550
It's connected to heart disease.

612
00:34:56,550 --> 00:34:59,420
If women don't have enough folic
acid while they're pregnant,

613
00:34:59,420 --> 00:35:02,360
it can lead to birth
defects, neural tube disease,

614
00:35:02,360 --> 00:35:05,350
where the brain
doesn't form properly.

615
00:35:05,350 --> 00:35:10,370
Also, there is rising evidence
connecting a vitamin B12

616
00:35:10,370 --> 00:35:14,480
deficiency with bringing
on Alzheimer's disease.

617
00:35:14,480 --> 00:35:18,270
And some people actually buy
little B12 squirt bottles

618
00:35:18,270 --> 00:35:21,020
and squirt it into
their nose before exams.

619
00:35:21,020 --> 00:35:22,920
I'm not sure that helps.

620
00:35:22,920 --> 00:35:25,610
But as you get older,
I would seriously

621
00:35:25,610 --> 00:35:29,330
consider taking
extra vitamin B12.

622
00:35:29,330 --> 00:35:32,190
So since we're
talking about this,

623
00:35:32,190 --> 00:35:34,920
we'll have a little
nutrition quiz.

624
00:35:34,920 --> 00:35:38,790
Where do you get vitamin B12
and folic acid in your diet?

625
00:35:38,790 --> 00:35:40,920
First let's think
about vitamin B12.

626
00:35:40,920 --> 00:35:43,670
Does anyone know where you get
this, besides vitamin pills,

627
00:35:43,670 --> 00:35:44,630
in food?

628
00:35:44,630 --> 00:35:46,689
Where do you get vitamin
B12 in food, yeah?

629
00:35:46,689 --> 00:35:47,480
AUDIENCE: Broccoli?

630
00:35:47,746 --> 00:35:49,079
CATHERINE DRENNAN: Broccoli, no.

631
00:35:53,480 --> 00:35:55,420
We had a hand up there.

632
00:35:55,420 --> 00:35:56,770
Anyone else?

633
00:35:56,770 --> 00:35:58,436
Yeah.

634
00:35:58,436 --> 00:35:59,060
AUDIENCE: Meat?

635
00:35:59,060 --> 00:36:02,270
CATHERINE DRENNAN: Meat,
yes-- red meat, actually

636
00:36:02,270 --> 00:36:03,150
any kind of meat.

637
00:36:03,150 --> 00:36:06,110
But hardly ever is
red meat the answer

638
00:36:06,110 --> 00:36:07,710
to a nutritional question.

639
00:36:07,710 --> 00:36:11,870
So I thought I'd put it up
there in big bold red letters.

640
00:36:11,870 --> 00:36:15,910
Yeah, you get B12 in meat.

641
00:36:15,910 --> 00:36:18,250
Plants don't use vitamin B12.

642
00:36:18,250 --> 00:36:20,440
So you can eat as many
plants as you want.

643
00:36:20,440 --> 00:36:23,360
Unless they're covered with
bacteria that do use B12,

644
00:36:23,360 --> 00:36:25,640
you will not get
any in your diet.

645
00:36:25,640 --> 00:36:28,360
So if you're vegetarian, you
should take a vitamin tablet.

646
00:36:28,360 --> 00:36:31,150
You don't need much, so it's
not really your problem.

647
00:36:31,150 --> 00:36:32,860
But it does come from red meat.

648
00:36:32,860 --> 00:36:34,480
What about folic acid?

649
00:36:34,480 --> 00:36:38,461
Any guesses where
folic acid comes from?

650
00:36:38,461 --> 00:36:38,960
Yeah.

651
00:36:38,960 --> 00:36:40,120
AUDIENCE: Broccoli?

652
00:36:40,120 --> 00:36:41,950
CATHERINE DRENNAN: Yes.

653
00:36:41,950 --> 00:36:43,230
Very good.

654
00:36:43,230 --> 00:36:46,600
So it's the fall in New England,
and hopefully some of you

655
00:36:46,600 --> 00:36:49,760
have gone out and
seen the foliage.

656
00:36:49,760 --> 00:36:54,300
So folic acid does come
from green leafy things.

657
00:36:54,300 --> 00:36:59,820
And if you're Norwegian, you
will also say the following.

658
00:36:59,820 --> 00:37:05,140
So Norwegian scientists claim
that the great longevity

659
00:37:05,140 --> 00:37:07,120
of Norwegians has
to do with the fact

660
00:37:07,120 --> 00:37:09,370
that their beer is
rich in folic acid.

661
00:37:09,370 --> 00:37:11,020
And somehow they
even got a grant

662
00:37:11,020 --> 00:37:14,200
from the Norwegian government
to study the correlation

663
00:37:14,200 --> 00:37:18,640
between beer and health.

664
00:37:18,640 --> 00:37:21,400
Everyone signed up for
that study, I'm sure.

665
00:37:21,400 --> 00:37:25,000
So red meat and beer
for good health.

666
00:37:25,000 --> 00:37:29,650
But yes, leafy green
vegetables, yes, folic acid,

667
00:37:29,650 --> 00:37:32,770
foliage, also orange
juice is really high.

668
00:37:32,770 --> 00:37:36,970
And at one point, they had this
commercial for orange juice.

669
00:37:36,970 --> 00:37:39,190
It's not just for
breakfast anymore.

670
00:37:39,190 --> 00:37:41,210
It's good for your heart.

671
00:37:41,210 --> 00:37:43,300
Well, that was because of
the folic acid in there.

672
00:37:43,300 --> 00:37:44,820
And that's actually true.

673
00:37:44,820 --> 00:37:47,980
So there was a commercial
that actually provided you

674
00:37:47,980 --> 00:37:50,740
with valuable
nutritional advice.

675
00:37:50,740 --> 00:37:52,370
Not so sure about
the beer, but I'd

676
00:37:52,370 --> 00:37:56,260
go buy the leafy greens
and the orange juice.

677
00:37:56,260 --> 00:37:59,110
So you need both of
these to be healthy.

678
00:37:59,110 --> 00:38:01,930
But again, we have this
problem that vitamin B12

679
00:38:01,930 --> 00:38:04,640
has this low negative
redox potential.

680
00:38:04,640 --> 00:38:06,520
So how is it reduced?

681
00:38:06,520 --> 00:38:09,700
Well, in the body it's
reduced by a protein called

682
00:38:09,700 --> 00:38:14,020
flavodoxin, which has a flavon,
which is another B vitamin.

683
00:38:14,020 --> 00:38:16,750
So there's lots of B
vitamins going on here.

684
00:38:16,750 --> 00:38:20,340
So the standard reduction
potential for vitamin B12

685
00:38:20,340 --> 00:38:22,480
is minus 0.526.

686
00:38:22,480 --> 00:38:25,320
That's a really low
number for biology.

687
00:38:25,320 --> 00:38:29,680
And for flavodoxin,
it's minus 0.23.

688
00:38:29,680 --> 00:38:34,201
So we ask, which is the
better reducing agent?

689
00:38:34,201 --> 00:38:35,534
And that's the clicker question.

690
00:38:46,970 --> 00:38:48,405
Let's just do 10 more seconds.

691
00:39:03,480 --> 00:39:05,940
Yep.

692
00:39:05,940 --> 00:39:09,190
So the better reducing agent
wants to reduce other things

693
00:39:09,190 --> 00:39:11,940
and get oxidized itself.

694
00:39:11,940 --> 00:39:17,800
So vitamin B12, with its
low negative potential,

695
00:39:17,800 --> 00:39:19,780
is very reducing.

696
00:39:19,780 --> 00:39:21,280
It wants to reduce other things.

697
00:39:21,280 --> 00:39:22,910
It wants to be an
agent of reduction.

698
00:39:26,020 --> 00:39:28,040
But that's not what's
supposed to happen.

699
00:39:28,040 --> 00:39:30,370
It's not supposed to
reduce flavodoxin.

700
00:39:30,370 --> 00:39:32,590
It's supposed to happen
the other way around.

701
00:39:32,590 --> 00:39:36,190
So we could ask, is
the reduction, then,

702
00:39:36,190 --> 00:39:40,390
of vitamin B13 by
flavodoxin spontaneous

703
00:39:40,390 --> 00:39:43,440
if this is the case, yes or no?

704
00:39:43,440 --> 00:39:44,830
No.

705
00:39:44,830 --> 00:39:46,360
It shouldn't be spontaneous.

706
00:39:46,360 --> 00:39:49,170
It's not going the
way that it should go.

707
00:39:49,170 --> 00:39:54,130
So we can just calculate how
exactly non-spontaneous it is.

708
00:39:54,130 --> 00:40:00,340
So we can calculate both
what the change in potential

709
00:40:00,340 --> 00:40:05,290
is, and we can also
calculate delta G0 from this.

710
00:40:05,290 --> 00:40:08,540
So we saw how to do this before.

711
00:40:08,540 --> 00:40:10,870
But we were talking
about different kinds

712
00:40:10,870 --> 00:40:13,360
of galvanic or
electrolytic cells.

713
00:40:13,360 --> 00:40:16,510
But now we can use
the same equation

714
00:40:16,510 --> 00:40:19,060
that we saw before but
talk about it in terms

715
00:40:19,060 --> 00:40:20,890
of a biological system.

716
00:40:20,890 --> 00:40:25,870
So before we saw to calculate
E0 of the cell, the cell

717
00:40:25,870 --> 00:40:28,960
potential, we had the
standard reduction potential

718
00:40:28,960 --> 00:40:31,600
for the couple at the anode
minus the standard reduction

719
00:40:31,600 --> 00:40:33,730
potential for a
couple at the cathode.

720
00:40:33,730 --> 00:40:36,100
We can do the same
thing here but just

721
00:40:36,100 --> 00:40:40,130
put reduction and
oxidation over here.

722
00:40:40,130 --> 00:40:42,760
So we can make this
a generic equation.

723
00:40:42,760 --> 00:40:45,250
And we can plug our values in.

724
00:40:45,250 --> 00:40:47,980
So the thing being
reduced is vitamin B12.

725
00:40:47,980 --> 00:40:51,550
So we want to put the reduction
potential of B12 in there.

726
00:40:51,550 --> 00:40:55,570
And the thing being
oxidized is the flavodoxin.

727
00:40:55,570 --> 00:40:59,110
And so minus
0.526six for the B12.

728
00:40:59,110 --> 00:41:00,700
Standard reduction
potential would

729
00:41:00,700 --> 00:41:03,340
be 12 minus the
standard reduction

730
00:41:03,340 --> 00:41:05,230
potential of flavodoxin.

731
00:41:05,230 --> 00:41:10,810
And we get a negative
number, minus 0.0296 volts.

732
00:41:10,810 --> 00:41:13,980
So then we have
a negative value,

733
00:41:13,980 --> 00:41:17,730
which should tell us that delta
G is going to be positive.

734
00:41:17,730 --> 00:41:20,500
But we can also
calculate that value

735
00:41:20,500 --> 00:41:22,570
from the equation
you saw before.

736
00:41:22,570 --> 00:41:26,200
So just because we are talking
about these equations in terms

737
00:41:26,200 --> 00:41:28,540
of cells before,
we can also talk

738
00:41:28,540 --> 00:41:32,170
about it's same exact equation
that we use in biology.

739
00:41:32,170 --> 00:41:35,540
So minus n, number of
moles of electrons--

740
00:41:35,540 --> 00:41:37,384
this is a one-electron process.

741
00:41:37,384 --> 00:41:38,800
I would have had
to tell you that.

742
00:41:38,800 --> 00:41:41,470
You wouldn't necessarily
have known it's one electron.

743
00:41:41,470 --> 00:41:43,300
But that's our one.

744
00:41:43,300 --> 00:41:46,210
What is this term here, this
kind of weird-looking F term?

745
00:41:46,210 --> 00:41:48,080
What is that again?

746
00:41:48,080 --> 00:41:49,720
Faraday's constant.

747
00:41:49,720 --> 00:41:52,150
Then we plug in
our cell potential

748
00:41:52,150 --> 00:41:54,170
or potential difference.

749
00:41:54,170 --> 00:41:57,850
And we get out a value
positive 28.6 kilojoules

750
00:41:57,850 --> 00:42:00,580
per mole-- big positive number.

751
00:42:00,580 --> 00:42:04,150
So is this spontaneous?

752
00:42:04,150 --> 00:42:06,710
Why don't we all
have heart disease?

753
00:42:06,710 --> 00:42:09,890
It is not a
spontaneous reaction.

754
00:42:09,890 --> 00:42:11,170
So how is it driven forward ?

755
00:42:11,170 --> 00:42:13,040
This happens in our body.

756
00:42:13,040 --> 00:42:14,080
This reaction happens.

757
00:42:14,080 --> 00:42:18,640
So clearly something has to
happen to make it spontaneous.

758
00:42:18,640 --> 00:42:21,700
So when we were talking about
the different kinds of cells,

759
00:42:21,700 --> 00:42:24,730
we had electrolytic cell,
where we could put in a current

760
00:42:24,730 --> 00:42:27,610
to drive a
non-spontaneous reaction.

761
00:42:27,610 --> 00:42:30,730
Same thing happens in
biology, and the current

762
00:42:30,730 --> 00:42:32,890
in this particular
case is a molecule

763
00:42:32,890 --> 00:42:35,170
known as adenosylmethionine.

764
00:42:35,170 --> 00:42:38,710
So it's the methionine amino
acid within a denosyl group

765
00:42:38,710 --> 00:42:40,060
attached to it.

766
00:42:40,060 --> 00:42:44,590
And the cleavage of this
molecule is very spontaneous.

767
00:42:44,590 --> 00:42:49,120
It has a delta G of minus
30.6 kilojoules, which

768
00:42:49,120 --> 00:42:51,150
is greater than what we need.

769
00:42:51,150 --> 00:42:54,280
And we can even
calculate the net delta G

770
00:42:54,280 --> 00:42:56,860
for this reaction,
the coupled reaction,

771
00:42:56,860 --> 00:42:59,420
of the cleavage
with the reduction.

772
00:42:59,420 --> 00:43:05,470
And if we do that, we have
minus 37.6 plus 28.6, so

773
00:43:05,470 --> 00:43:09,350
minus 9.0 kilojoules per mole.

774
00:43:09,350 --> 00:43:13,420
So we can drive this
unfavorable reduction reaction

775
00:43:13,420 --> 00:43:16,030
with a very favorable
reaction, the cleavage

776
00:43:16,030 --> 00:43:17,731
of adenosylmethionine.

777
00:43:17,731 --> 00:43:18,730
And that's how it works.

778
00:43:18,730 --> 00:43:22,810
So that's why we're all healthy.

779
00:43:22,810 --> 00:43:26,020
So this is the end of our
oxidation reduction example.

780
00:43:26,020 --> 00:43:28,980
We'll transition to
transition metals.

781
00:43:28,980 --> 00:43:32,500
But we're not moving very far
away from oxidation reduction.

782
00:43:32,500 --> 00:43:35,710
Because to do problems that are
effective transition metals,

783
00:43:35,710 --> 00:43:38,200
you have to know how to
determine oxidation numbers

784
00:43:38,200 --> 00:43:40,410
and all sorts of things.