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At the electrode there are chemical changes.So the electrolyte will changeThe calculations for the voltage are in the thread I cited earlierThe power is much more difficult to calculate.It's going to be small, for any practical electrode size.
If I have a single electrochemical cell, with one chamber at pH 0, and one at pH 14 the maximum voltage I could get is about 0.82 V (59 mV per pH unit at standard temp and pressure).Subtract out the overpotentials (inefficiency at the electrode) for both reactions--let's say the electrodes are very efficient, and only waste about 200 mV each--that brings the external voltage of cell to a mere 0.42 V.Of course, one can stack cells in series to increase the voltage, and/or in parallel to increase the available current. In this way, one can use an arbitrarily large number of arbitrarily weak cells to construct an arbitrarily large battery.
Why is it going to be small?
So how do you multiply it?
Don't pH difference batteries exist?
I want to understand the logic.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exchange_current_density
It's not clear from that link.
the links from the page
someone who knows
the current still stays the same at 10-3A/cm2
the surface area is reduced?
Also, if you connect electrodes in series, you multiply the voltage and the current still stays the same at 10-3A/cm2 or it will be smaller because the surface area is reduced?
2) There are many ways to do this, but essentially you will want an electrochemical half reaction that releases (or consumes) protons. Couple this half reaction with its reverse reaction, and if they are in the same pH, then there won't be any electromotive force. But if the side that is consuming protons is more acidic than the one producing them, then you can take advantage of this.
3) If you put a proton exchange membrane between solutions of different pH, protons will just move from the more acidic side to the less acidic, until they are the same--with no useful energy extracted. Better to have an anion exchange membrane and let the chloride do the walking.
4) Yes, there are ways of capturing the energy of the protons moving across the gradient without actually doing electrochemical reactions. But these are not very useful from an energy density standpoint.