Similar to how the concentration of hydrogen ions determines the acidity or
pH of an aqueous solution, the tendency of electron transfer between a chemical species and an electrode determines the redox potential of an electrode couple. Like pH, redox potential represents how easily electrons are transferred to or from species in solution. Redox potential characterises the ability under the specific condition of a chemical species to lose or gain electrons instead of the amount of electrons available for oxidation or reduction. The notion of is used with
Pourbaix diagrams. is a dimensionless number and can easily be related to
EH by the following relationship: : pe = \frac{E_{H}}{V_T \lambda} = \frac{E_{H}}{0.05916} = 16.903 \, \text{×} \, E_{H} where, V_T=\frac{RT}{F} is the
thermal voltage, with , the
gas constant (), , the
absolute temperature in
Kelvin (298.15 K = 25 °C = 77 °F), , the
Faraday constant (96 485 coulomb/mol of ), and λ = ln(10) ≈ 2.3026. In fact, pe = -\log[e^-] is defined as the negative logarithm of the free electron concentration in solution, and is directly proportional to the redox potential. Sometimes pe is used as a unit of reduction potential instead of E_h, for example, in environmental chemistry. If one normalizes pe of hydrogen to zero, one obtains the relation pe = 16.9\ E_h at room temperature. This notion is useful for understanding redox potential, although the transfer of electrons, rather than the absolute concentration of free electrons in thermal equilibrium, is how one usually thinks of redox potential. Theoretically, however, the two approaches are equivalent. Conversely, one could define a potential corresponding to pH as a potential difference between a solute and pH neutral water, separated by porous membrane (that is permeable to hydrogen ions). Such potential differences actually do occur from differences in acidity on biological membranes. This potential (where pH neutral water is set to 0 V) is analogous with redox potential (where standardized hydrogen solution is set to 0 V), but instead of hydrogen ions, electrons are transferred across in the redox case. Both pH and redox potentials are properties of solutions, not of elements or chemical compounds themselves, and depend on concentrations, temperature etc. The table below shows a few reduction potentials, which can be changed to oxidation potentials by reversing the sign.
Reducers donate electrons to (or "reduce")
oxidizing agents, which are said to "be reduced by" the reducer. The reducer is stronger when it has a more negative reduction potential and weaker when it has a more positive reduction potential. The more positive the reduction potential the greater the species' affinity for electrons and tendency to be reduced. The following table provides the reduction potentials of the indicated
reducing agent at 25 °C. For example, among
sodium (Na) metal,
chromium (Cr) metal,
cuprous (Cu+) ion and
chloride (Cl−) ion, it is Na metal that is the strongest reducing agent while Cl− ion is the weakest; said differently, Na+ ion is the weakest oxidizing agent in this list while molecule is the strongest. Some elements and compounds can be both reducing or
oxidizing agents. Hydrogen gas is a reducing agent when it reacts with non-metals and an oxidizing agent when it reacts with metals. : Hydrogen (whose reduction potential is 0.0) acts as an oxidizing agent because it accepts an electron donation from the reducing agent
lithium (whose reduction potential is −3.04), which causes Li to be oxidized and Hydrogen to be reduced. : Hydrogen acts as a reducing agent because it donates its electrons to fluorine, which allows fluorine to be reduced. == Standard reduction potential ==