Electrochemical vs Electrolytic Cells: Key Differences Explained

Electrochemical cells convert chemical energy into electrical energy spontaneously (like a battery). Electrolytic cells do the opposite, using external electricity to drive non-spontaneous chemical reactions (like plating jewelry).

People confuse them because both involve electrodes, ions, and redox reactions. The twist: one powers your phone, the other coats your earbuds in gold. Same parts, opposite energy flow—like a video playing forward vs. in reverse.

Key Differences

Electrochemical cells have positive Gibbs free energy; electrolytic cells negative. In the former, the anode is negative and cathode positive; in the latter, it’s reversed. Salt bridge vs. external power source completes the circuit.

Which One Should You Choose?

Need portable power? Use an electrochemical cell (alkaline, lithium-ion). Need to refine aluminum or electroplate chrome? Hook up an electrolytic cell. Match the process to the goal: spontaneous energy out or forced reaction in.

Examples and Daily Life

AA batteries and smartphone packs are electrochemical cells. Laptop gold-plated USB ports and chrome-plated car trims come from electrolytic cells. One keeps devices alive, the other makes them shiny and corrosion-resistant.

Why does an electrolytic cell need a battery?

Because its reaction is non-spontaneous; the battery supplies the energy to push electrons uphill, splitting compounds or depositing metals.

Can one device act as both?

Yes. Rechargeable lithium-ion batteries operate as electrochemical cells when discharging and switch to electrolytic mode during charging.

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