In a voltaic cell, the anode is the negative electrode.
In an electrolytic cell, the anode is positive.
In a galvanic cell, the anode is the negative electrode.
In an electrochemical cell, the anode is the positive electrode.
No, the anode is the negative electrode in an electrochemical cell.
Yes, in an electrochemical cell, the cathode is the negative electrode and the anode is the positive electrode.
The negative electrode of a voltaic cell is called the anode. It is where oxidation occurs as electrons are released into the circuit.
In an electrolytic cell, an external power source is needed to drive a non-spontaneous redox reaction, while in a voltaic cell, the redox reaction is spontaneous and generates electric energy. In an electrolytic cell, the anode is positive and the cathode is negative, whereas in a voltaic cell, the anode is negative and the cathode is positive.
In an electrolytic cell, the anode is positive.
In a galvanic cell, the anode is the negative electrode.
In an electrochemical cell, the anode is the positive electrode.
No, the anode is the negative electrode in an electrochemical cell.
The Cathode is the negative electrode; the anode is the positive electrode
Yes, in an electrochemical cell, the cathode is the negative electrode and the anode is the positive electrode.
They are called the electrodes or terminals. The parts of a cell where current leaves and enters the cell. The cathode is the positive, the anode is the negative.
Anode is positive electrode which attracts the negative anions while cathode is the negative electrode which attracts the positive cations during electrolysis.
Yes, the anode is negative in a galvanic cell.
Yes, the anode is negative in an electrochemical cell.