
Electricity is "created" when certain
chemicals react together. We use chemically- made electricity to power many
machines from flashlights to a watch or sometimes a car. Yes, there are cars
that run on electricity! The devices that store electricity are called
batteries. Electricity can also be used to produce chemical changes.
Water is a simple chemical made from two gases -- hydrogen and oxygen. Every
molecule of water has two atoms of hydrogen for every atom of oxygen. H2O
is the chemical formula for a molecule of water.
If an electrical current is passed through water between electrodes (the
positive and minus poles of a battery), the water is split into its two parts:
oxygen and hydrogen. This process is called electrolysis and is used in
industry in many ways, such as making metals like aluminum. If one of the
electrodes is a metal, it will become covered or plated with any metal
in the solution. This is how objects are silverplated.
You can use electricity to split hydrogen gas out of the water similar to the
process called electrolysis.
Try This!
What do you need?
What to do?
Sharpen
each pencil at both ends.
Cut
the cardboard to fit over glass.
Push
the two pencils into the cardboard, about an inch apart.

Dissolve
about a teaspoon of salt into the warm water and let sit for a while. The salt
helps conduct the electricity better in the water.
Using
one piece of the electrical wire, connect one end on the positive side of the
battery and the other to the black graphite (the "lead" of the
pencil) at the top of the sharpened pencil. Do the same for the negative side
connecting it to the second pencil top.
Place
the other two ends of the pencil into the salted water.
What you’ll discover:
As the electricity
from the battery passes through and between the electrodes (the pencils), the
water splits into hydrogen and chlorine gas, which collect as very
tiny bubbles around each pencil tip.
Hydrogen collects around the cathode and the chlorine gas collects around the
anode.
How can you get chlorine from H2O? Good question! Sometimes in experiments, a
secondary reaction takes place. This is what happens in this experiment.
Oxygen is not given off in this experiment. That's because the oxygen atoms
from the water combine in the liquid with the salt to form hydroxyl ions.
Salt's chemical formula is NaCl - sodium chloride. The chlorine gas is from the
chloride in the salt. The oxygen in the hydroxyl ions stays in the solution.
So, what is released in this reaction is not oxygen but is chlorine gas that
collects around the pencil tip. Around the other pencil is hydrogen gas.
In real electrolysis systems, a different solution is used, and higher levels
of electricity help to split the water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen
without this secondary reaction.