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Oxidation-Reduction Topic 9.1 1+ 2+ 3+ ...etc. 4+/- 3- 2- 1- 0 Memorize these! NO31- nitrate NO21- nitrite OH1- hydroxide ClO21- chlorite ClO31- chlorate HCO31SO42- hydrogencarbonate (bicarbonate) sulfate SO32- sulfite CO3 2- carbonate PO43- phosphate NH41+ ammonium Introduction • oxidation and reduction can be considered in terms of… 1. oxidation- substance gains oxygen reduction- substance loses oxygen 2. oxidation- the loss of electrons reduction- the gain of electrons 3. oxidation- the oxidation state/# increases reduction- the oxidation state/# decreases O I L - oxidation - is - loss of electrons R I G - reduction - is - gain of electrons Oxidation states Note: oxidation states must be written with the sign in FRONT: +2 not 2+ • the oxidation state (number) is the apparent or theoretical charge of an free element, molecule, or ion • oxidation – a process where the number increases (more positive because loses neg. electrons) • Ex: Mg Mg2+ (aq) + 2e- • reduction – a process where the number decreases (less positive/more negative because gains neg. electrons) • Ex: O + 2 e- O2- (g) Rules for assigning oxidation states 1 The oxidation number of an free element is always 0 O2, H2, Ne, Zn 2 The oxidation number of Hydrogen is usually +1 Metal hydrides are an exception. They are -1 HCl, H2SO4 NaH 3 The oxidation number of Oxygen is usually -2. Peroxides are an exception They are –1. H2O, NO2, etc. -O-Obonding 4 Group 1 metals are always +1 Group 2 metals are always +2 Aluminum is always +3 Li, Na… Mg, Ba.. Al 5 Fluorine is always -1 Other group 17 (halogens) are often 1 HF, OF2 HI, NaCl, KBr 6 Oxidation numbers of monatomic ions follow S2-, Zn2+ the charge of the ion 7 The SUM of oxidation numbers is zero for a neutral compound. LiMNO4… 8 For polyatomic ions, the SUM is their charge. SO42-, NO31- Practice Assigning Oxidation Numbers NO2 O is -2 x 2 = -4 N must equal +4 N2O5 O is -2 x 5 = -10 N must equal +10/2 = +5 HClO3 (+1) + (x) + 3(-2) = 0; x = (+5) HNO3 O is -2 x 3 = -6; H is +1; N must equal +5 Ca(NO3)2 O is -2 x 3 = -6 x 2 = -12; Ca is +2; N must equal +10/2 = +5 KMnO4 O is -2 x 4 = -8; K is +1; Mn must equal +7 Fe(OH)3 O is -2 x 3 = -6; Fe is +3; H is +1 x 3 = +3 K2Cr2O7 O is -2 x 7 = -14; K is +1 x 2 = +2; Cr must equal +12/2 = +6 CO32- x + 3(-2) = -2 x = +4 CN- N is -3; Charge = -1 means that C must be +2 K3Fe(CN)6 N is -3 x 6 = -18; C is +2 x 6 = +12; K is +1 x 3 =+3; Fe must be +3 CH4 H is +1 x 4 = +4; C must be -4 Using Oxidation Numbers • an increase in the oxidation number indicates that an atom has lost electrons and therefore is oxidized • a decrease in the oxidation number indicates that an atom has gained electrons and therefore reduced • Example Zn + CuSO4 ZnSO4 + Cu 0 +2 +6-2 +2+6-2 0 Zn: 0 + 2 Oxidized Cu: +2 0 Reduced S and O are unchanged Exercise For each of the following reactions (not balanced to simplify) find the element oxidized and the element reduced Cl2 Cu + KBr KCl + Br2 + HNO3 Cu(NO3)2 + NO2 + H2O HNO3 + I2 HIO3 + NO2 Exercise For each of the following reactions find the element oxidized and the element reduced Cl2 0 + KBr +1-1 KCl + +1-1 Br loses an electron -- oxidized Cl gains an electron -- reduced K remains unchanged at +1 Br2 0 Exercise For each of the following reactions find the element oxidized and the element reduced Cu + HNO3 Cu(NO3)2 + NO2 + H2O 0 +1+5-2 +2 +5 -2 +4 –2 +1 -2 • Cu increases from 0 to +2. It is oxidized • Only part of the N in nitric acid changes from +5 to +4. It is reduced • The nitrogen that ends up in copper nitrate remains unchanged Exercise For each of the following reactions find the element oxidized and the element reduced HNO3 + +1+5-2 • • • I2 0 HIO3 + +1+5-2 NO2 +4-2 N is reduced from +5 to +4. It is reduced. I is increased from 0 to +5 It is oxidized The hydrogen and oxygen remain unchanged. Agents • all redox reactions have one element oxidized and one element reduced • the compound that supplies the electrons (is oxidized) is the reducing agent • the compound that accepts the electrons (is reduced) is the oxidizing agent • occasionally, the same element may undergo both oxidation and reduction. This is known as an auto-oxidation reduction Review of Stock nomenclature (naming) of transitional metals • transition metals can form more than one type of ion (i.e. lose different amounts of electrons) – Cu1+, Cu 2+ • use roman numerals to indicate the charge – Cu1+ = “Copper I” ; Cu 2+ = “Copper II” • Exceptions: Ag1+, Zn2+, Cd2+, Al3+, Sc3+ • ex. copper (II) oxide (“copper two oxide”) – CuO – oxygen has a -2 charge, so it would only take one Cu2+ to bond with Oxygen. • ex. copper (I) oxide – copper 1+ -we would need two of these to react with oxygen so the formula would be: • Cu2O Examples • lead (II) hydroxide – Pb(OH)2 • cadmium nitrate – cadmium is always -2 – Cd(NO3)2 • MnO2 – manganese (IV) oxide Balancing Redox Reactions • many chemical reactions involving oxidations and reductions are complex and very difficult to balance by the “guess and check” methods we learned earlier • for complicated reactions, a more systematic approach is required Half-equations • half equations show the changes to individual species in a redox reaction. • Fe2O3 + 2 Al 2 Fe + Al2O3 – Fe3+ + 3 e- Fe ….this is the reduction – Al Al3+ + 3 e- ….this is the oxidation • a wide variety of half equations can be found in the data booklet Balancing Redox Reactions in 7 “easy” steps 1. assign oxidation states for each atom 2. deduce which species is oxidized and which is reduced 3. write half reactions for the oxidation and reduction – take compounds where “action” took place, split them and write them as individual reactions; there will be 2 half reactions 4. balance these half equations so # of electrons lost equals the # gained 5. add the to half equations together to write the overall redox reaction 6. check the total charge on the reactant and product sides. 7. balance the charge by adding H+ and H2O to the appropriate sides. Exercise • Deduce and balanced redox equation and identify the oxidizing and reducing agents. Fe2+ + MnO4- Fe3+ + Mn2+ • Step 1. +2 +7 -8 +3 +2 • Step 2. Fe is oxidized & Mn is reduced • Step 3. Fe2+ Fe3+ + eMnO4- + 5e- Mn2+ • Step 4. 5Fe2+ 5Fe3+ + 5eMnO4- + 5e- Mn2+ Exercise • Step 5. 5Fe2+ + MnO4- 5Fe3+ + Mn2+ • Step 6. Total charge on reactant side = 9+ Total charge on product side = 17+ • Step 7. To balance the equation charges, 8H+ must be added to the reactant side. 5Fe2+ + MnO4- + 8H+ 5Fe3+ + Mn2+ Now need to balance the hydrogens by adding water 5Fe2+ + MnO4- + 8H+ 5Fe3+ + Mn2+ + 4H2O Exercise Balancing Redox Equations 1 Cu + HNO3 Cu(NO3)2 + NO + H2O Balancing Redox Equations 2 HNO3 + I2 HIO3 + NO2 + H2O