Zn(s)/Zn2+(aq)//Au+(aq)/Au(s)
The standard cell notation for a galvanic cell with aluminum and gold electrodes is represented as: Al(s) | Al³⁺(aq) || Au³⁺(aq) | Au(s). In this notation, the anode (aluminum) is listed on the left, and the cathode (gold) is on the right. The double vertical line (||) indicates the salt bridge or separation between the two half-cells. The state of each component (solid or aqueous) is also noted.
Type your answer here... Al(s) | Al3+(aq) Mg2+ (aq) | Mg(s)
Au(s) | Au+(aq) Al3+(aq) | Al(s)(-_^)
It is Au, for Aurum.
Unfortunately there are disadvantages to the gold standard. One of the main disadvantages of implementation is that a gold standard would artificially inflate gold's value, increasing the cost of items and industrial process in which it is used. Another disadvantage is under the gold standard, gold mined at a different rate than the economy grows can produce both inflation, when deposits are discovered and extracted and deflation when they are mined to exhaustion
Zn(s)/Zn2+(aq)//Au+(aq)/Au(s)
Mg(s) | Mg2+(aq) Au+(aq) | Au(s)
Zn(s)/Zn2+(aq)//Au+(aq)/Au(s)
Zn(s)/Zn2+(aq)//Au+(aq)/Au(s)
Type your answer here... Al(s) | Al3+(aq) Mg2+ (aq) | Mg(s)
Al(s) I AI3+(aq) II AI3+ (aq) I Al(s)
Zn(s)/Zn2+(aq)//Au+(aq)/Au(s)
4.2 V
4.2 V
The aluminum metals
the gold electrode
4.2V