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Well, be careful here: where E(red) is MORE NEGATIVE is the ANODE. The anode always has the oxidation reaction taking place and that's why it is called the anode. Surely in the cell electron flows from it to the other electrode so that it is the negative electrode, but it is still the anode, just because oxidation happens on it.guys, can you confirm whether I've got my facts right? okay so in the electrochemical cell, the electrode at the left hand side is essentially a cathode and the equation which involves a more negative electrode potential value goes here but instead of reduction oxidation takes place here and the electrons are released while on the right hand side we have an anode and recuction takes place here and the more positive electrode potential value comes here (less reactive equation) and the electrons are used up?
Vice-versa, the cathode is where reduction takes place.
And one more point: the relative positions don't matter. Like in a copper-zinc cell, if you exchange the positions of the Cu/Cu(2+) cell and the Zn/Zn(2+) cell, electron flow direction is not affected (still from Zn to Cu), nor is the E(cell) and the reactions taking place.