So with copper sulphate cell and E-waste anode definitely we will get silver chloride in the filter bags in precents of NaCl as an additive, so what is the best practice to process the filter bags from the copper refining cell?
Your physics formulas are theorly correct, but with experiment its not, with parallel connection we get different voltage in each cell, also I have another example, my workshop is next to the public electricity transformer, I got approximately 240 v on each electricity line (about 420 v on 3 phases), so I use an indoor transformer to get 220/380 v to save my electric tools, but my far neighbors which connected to the same transformer they don't have an issue cause they get approximately 220 v, when I talked to the electricity company regard this issue they apologized and advised me to use indoor transformer they said we can't reduce it cause far neighbors will get less Voltage that can't be converted to higher Voltage.
Voltage is dropped depends on many things like wire length/quality and temperature, but how voltage is dropped like my example in the copper refining cell? And how we can manage it, silver need 0.7 v to be in sulphuric solution and copper needs 0.35 v, so voltage in cells should be between 0.35 and 0.7, how we can control the voltage between cells? Am not talking about the DC voltage, talking if we use multimeter between each anode and cathode we got different voltage read.