Physics:Electron equivalent
From HandWiki
Electron equivalent is a concept commonly used in redox chemistry, reactions involving electron transfer, to define a quantity (e.g. energy or moles) relative to one electron. Energies of formation are often given as kilojoules per electron equivalent to enable calculation of specific reaction energies on a "per electron" basis. Reactions containing movement of electrons are often balanced such that reaction quantities are given in relation to the transfer of a single electron, allowing quantification of reactants and products in relation to a single electron transfer.
References
- Rittman, B.E.; McCarty, P.L. (2001). Environmental Biotechnology: Principles and Applications. McGraw-Hill. p. 60. ISBN 0-07-234553-5. https://archive.org/details/environmentalbio00ritt_570.
- Schwarzenbach, Rene P.; Gschwend, Philip M.; Imboden, Dieter (2003). Environmental Organic Chemistry (2nd ed.). John Wiley & Sons. p. 568. ISBN 0471357502. https://archive.org/details/environmentalorg00schw.
- Sayyar, Bahareh (2008). Thermodynamic electron equivalent models for Geobacter species. University of Toronto (Canada). ISBN 978-0-494-44914-1.