clonestar said:
Very easy answer.
In CHemistry you have an electrochemical cell and an electrolytic cell. One has current forced into it(electrochemical/galvanic) and one actually generates current(electrolytic).
Here is where the deinfitions are not the same thing. In electrochemical anode=oxidising and cathode = reduction.
In electrolytic = cathode = oxidising and anode=reduction
Basically the cathode generates electrons and forces them out to which the CAThode ray tube in Physics is the same principle. i.e. you connect an induction coil which pumps out electrons then you are using an electrolytic cell.
It is along those lines...
Hope it helps.
actually reduction always occurs at the cathode and oxidation always occur at the anode (yes ppl an ox and red cat will always hold true)
The only thing that changes is the charge of these terminals either negative or positive.
My chem teacher basically explained it this way:
in chem (galvanic cells) the cells naturally uses their chemical potential energy to produce electrical energy through oxidation and reduction and exchange of electrons and all that.
BUt in physics (and also electrolytic cells), electrical energy is used to bring about chemical change, think of it as forcing the redox reaction backwards.
So if ur using electricity for any process, the cathode is always negative (electron builds up here) and anode is positive (electron moves towards here due to positive nature), but if ur using chemistry to produce electricity, the anode is negative (free electrons formed here) and cathode positive (electron used up here)
And since in physics its not really dealing with the chemistry, but the electrical energy, they regard cathode as negative terminal and anode as positive terminal.
Just remember that oxidation = anode and reduction = cathode and onli thing changed is the sign of the charge and u'll be fine