Friday, January 3, 2020
What Is the Faraday Constant
The Faraday constant, F, is a physical constant equal to the total electric charge carried by one mole of electrons. The constant is named for English scientist Michael Faraday. The accepted value of the constant is: F 96,485.3365(21) C/molF 96à 485.3329 s A / molF 23.061 kcal per volt gram equivalentF 26.801 Aà ·h/mol Initially, the value of F was determined by weighing the mass of silver deposited in an electrochemical reaction in which the amount and duration of current were known. The Faraday constant is related to Avogadros constantà NAà and the elementary charge of an electron eà by the equation: F à eà NA where: eà ââ°Ëà 1.60217662Ãâ"10âËâ19à C NAà ââ°Ëà 6.02214086Ãâ"1023à molâËâ1 Faradays Constant vs Faraday Unit The faraday is a unit of electrical charge that is equal to the magnitude of the charge of a mole of electrons. In other words, the Faraday constant equals 1 faraday. The f in the unit is not capitalized, while it is when referring to the constant. The faraday is rarely used, in favor of the SI unit of charge, the coulomb. An unrelated unit is a farad (1 farad 1 coulomb / 1 volt), which is a unit of capacitance, also named for Michael Faraday.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.