The difference between a "galvanic cell" and "electrolyte cell"

Hi

Reading Electrochemistry by Hamann [1998, p.237] he says that If a cell has a non offset (no DC) ac signal applied it will operate like "galvanic cell" rather than an "electrolyte cell". I was under the impression that they were the same thing. However, a good old search on Google reveled the following difference:

- Galvanic cell: DeltaG < 0; spontaneous; -DeltaG = maximum electric work output

- Electrolyte cell: DeltaG > 0; non-spontaneous; DeltaG = minimum electric work needed

Does this mean that a Galvanic will produce electrical energy and a electrolyte cell with produce chemical?

Can someone clear this up for me?

Cheers

Wayne

Reply to
Wayne
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Yes, this is correct.

See also the Electrochemistry Dictionary at

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Good luck, and Happy New Year: Z.N.

Reply to
nagy

I read in sci.electronics.design that snipped-for-privacy@anl.gov wrote (in ) about 'The difference between a "galvanic cell" and "electrolyte cell"', on Tue, 4 Jan 2005:

No it isn't! (;-)

-- Regards, John Woodgate, OOO - Own Opinions Only. The good news is that nothing is compulsory. The bad news is that everything is prohibited.

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Also see
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Reply to
John Woodgate

Help!

Is it or isn't it and could you please explain you answer? (No this is not an exam question - just a pursuit for knowledge)

Cheers

Wayne

Reply to
WayneL

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