because chloride ions being negatively charged have got a tendency to get attracted to positive ions( follows from coloumbs law) and since positive electrode contains positive ions so chloride free ions in solution gets attracted to the positive electrode....
cations in a compound are always positive.
If a solution of NaI is electrolyzed, iodine is formed at the anode and hydrogen gas at the cathode. In the instance if it is the molten liquid of NaI, it would emit sodium from the sodium at the cathode and iodine at the anode.
Cation is a positive ion, not an element; for metals the symbol is Mex+.
Hydrogen gas would evolve from the cathode and oxygen gas would evolve from the anode.
DNA is neither cathode or anode, but it is negatively charged, so the DNA molecules will rn from anode to cathode
Cations are attracted to anions.
anions cos there the opposite
Because they are self-grounding. There is both an anode and an electrode in the barb set, so the charge is attracted to the anode, and doesn't need to be attracted to the ground.
When an atom loses an electron, it becomes a positively charged ion, called a cation.In chemist Michael Faraday's nomenclature, cations were named because they were attracted to the cathode in a galvanic device and anions were named due to their attraction to the anode.
When an atom loses an electron, it becomes a positively charged ion, called a cation.In chemist Michael Faraday's nomenclature, cations were named because they were attracted to the cathode in a galvanic device and anions were named due to their attraction to the anode.
Calcium cations are most attracted to negatively charged materials such as the following: Carbonates Oxides Phosphates Sulfates ChloridesCalcium cations are also attracted to certain organic acids such as citric acid lactic acid and tartaric acid.
A positive ion is called a cation. It forms when an atom loses one or more electrons, resulting in a net positive charge. Cations are attracted to anions, which are negative ions, due to their opposite charges.
The salt bridge allows cations to move in the galvanic cell. Electrons move from the anode to the cathode, leaving cations behind. The salt bridge allows for a balance of cations and anions to occur to continue the flow of electrons.
Anode is positive electrode which attracts the negative anions while cathode is the negative electrode which attracts the positive cations during electrolysis.
The force between charges is repulsive between charges with the same sign, and attractive between charges with opposite signs. The cathode is charged negative, and the anode is charged positive. Electrons have a negative charge. So any electron in the neighborhood of a pair of charged electrodes will be repelled by the cathode and attracted to the anode.
Anode is the positive electrode while cathode is the negative electrode. Negative ions(anions) travel towards the anode(hence the name) Positive ions(cations) travel towards the cathode(hence the name) Example for anode:Copper Example for cathode:Zinc