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Unit 7: Redox & { Electrochemistry What information does the oxidation number give you? Why electrochemistry? REDOX reactions are important in … • Purifying metals (e.g. Al, Na, Li) C3H8O + CrO3 + H2SO4 Cr2(SO4)3 + C3H6O + H2O • Producing gases (e.g. Cl2, O2, H2) • Electroplating metals • Electrical production (batteries, fuel cells) • Protecting metals from corrosion • Balancing complex chemical equations • Sensors and machines (e.g. pH meter) What is Redox? REDOX stands for REDuction/OXidation Oxidation is often thought of as a combination of a substance with oxygen (rusting, burning) e- Oxidation refers to a loss of Reduction refers to a gain of e- Remember: LEO the lions says GERRRRRR! Loss Electrons = Oxidation Gain Electrons = Reduction Reactions What is happening to the Fe atom? Fe is going from 0 to +3 oxidation # It must be losing electrons Loss of Electrons = Oxidation In conclusion, the iron atom is being oxidized Reactions What is happening to the Sulfur atom? S is going from 0 to -2 oxidation # It must be gaining electrons Gain of Electrons = Reduction In conclusion, the sulfur atom is being reduced Oxidation Numbers - the charge an atom would have if the electrons belonged to the more EN atom - there are a few rules to help us out Na Na0 H2 H20 F2 F20 Oxidation Numbers - the charge an atom would have if the electrons belonged to the more EN atom H is ALWAYS +1 (for us) Disclaimer – there are compounds where H has a -1 oxidation number, but we don’t deal with them at this level of chemistry. Oxidation Numbers - the charge an atom would have if the electrons belonged to the more EN atom O is ALWAYS -2 (for us) Oxidation Numbers - the charge an atom would have if the electrons belonged to the more EN atom Na+1 Calcium ion Ca+2 Sodium ion Sulfur ion S-2 Nitrogen ion N-3 Oxidation Numbers - the charge an atom would have if the electrons belonged to the more EN atom NaCl Na+1Cl-1 AsI5 As+5I5-1 Cu(NO3)2 Cu+2(N+5O3-2)2 H2Cr2O7 H2+1Cr2+6 O7-2 Oxidation Numbers - the charge an atom would have if the electrons belonged to the more EN atom (SO4)-2 (S+6O4-2)-2 )- (N+5O3-2)- )-2 (Cr2+3O4)-2 (NO3 (Cr2O4 Oxidation Numbers Do the five problems on your notes sheet a. Cr2O3 d. KCl b. H2Cr2O7 e. Mg(OH)2 c. AsCl5 What things are conserved during a chemical reaction? What is reduced/oxidized? Identify in the following reactions what is oxidized and what is reduced 2K + Cl2 2KCl K0 – goes from 0 to +1, it is oxidized Cl0 – goes from 0 to -1, it is reduced Practice Identify in the following reactions what is oxidized and what is reduced 2NaCl + 3SO3 Cl2 + SO2 + Na2S2O7 Cl-1 – goes from -1 to 0, it is oxidized S+6 – goes from +6 to +4, it is reduced Practice Identify in the following reactions what is oxidized and what is reduced Zn + Pb+2(aq) Zn+2(aq) + Pb Zn0 – goes from 0 to +2, it is oxidized Pb+2 – goes from +2 to 0, it is reduced a. C + H2SO4 CO2 + SO2 + H2O b. HNO3 + HI NO + I2 + H2O c. KMnO4 + HCl MnCl2 + Cl2 + H2O + KCl d. Sb + HNO3 Sb2O5 + NO + H2O e. HCl + MnO2 MnCl2 + H2O + Cl2 a. C + H2SO4 CO2 + SO2 + H2O b. HNO3 + HI NO + I2 + H2O c. KMnO4 + HCl MnCl2 + Cl2 + H2O + KCl d. Sb + HNO3 Sb2O5 + NO + H2O e. HCl + MnO2 MnCl2 + H2O + Cl2 1. C + 2Cl2 CCl4 Ox – Red – 2. H2 + Cl2 2HCl Ox – Red – 3. 2P + 3Cl2 2PCl3 Ox – Red – 4. C + H2O CO + H2 Ox – Red – 5. Fe + 3Cl2 2FeCl2 Ox – Red – 6. 2Al + 3Br2 2AlBr3 Ox – Red – 7. Pb + 2HCl PbCl2 + H2 Ox – Red – 8. SiO2 + 2C Si + 2CO Ox – Red – 9. CO2 + 2Mg 2MgO + C Ox – Red – 10. H2SO4 + Zn ZnSO4 + H2 Ox – Red - Identify what atom is oxidized and what atom is reduced: Fe + 2HCl FeCl2 + H2 HALF REACTIONS Write both half reactions for the following reaction: Cu + AgNO3 Cu(NO3)2 + Ag Reduction: Ag+ Ag Ag+ + 1e- Ag Cu Cu+2 Cu Cu+2 + 2eCu - 2e- Cu+2 Oxidation: HALF REACTIONS Write both half reactions for the following reaction: HNO3 + I2 HIO3 + NO2 Reduction: N+5 N+4 N+5 + 1e- N+4 I20 I+5 I20 2I+5 + 10eI20 - 10e- 2I+5 Oxidation: Half Reactions Write both half reactions for the following reaction: Sn + AgNO3 Sn(NO3)2 + Ag Reduction: Ag+1 Ag0 Ag+1 + 1e- Ag0 Sn0 Sn+2 Sn0 Sn+2 + 2eSn0 - 2e- Sn+2 Oxidation: Redox Lab 2 Al + 3 CuCl2 Mass GFM Moles 3 Cu + 2 AlCl3 If you were to react Cu and Nickel(II) Chloride what would the products be? How much metal could you make if you started with 2.00g of Cu? Oxidizing and Reducing Agents Oxidizing Agent - causes the oxidation of another atom - it is actually the atom that is REDUCED - oxidation number decreases Reducing Agent - causes the reduction of another atom - it is actually the atom that is OXIDIZED - oxidation number increases Ca + Cl2 CaCl2 What is the O.A.? Cl What is the R.A.? Ca PRACTICE In the equation below, identify what is oxidized what is reduced. Also identify the oxidizing and reducing agent. 4HCl + MnO2 MnCl2 + 2H2O + Cl2 Oxidized: Cl- Reduced: Mn+4 Oxidizing Agent: Mn+4 Reducing Agent: Cl- Electrochemical Reactions Deals with chemical reactions that either produce electricity or need electricity to occur! There are 2 types of ELECTROCHEMICAL CELLS. Some things that are the same for both types of cells: 1. The RED CAT GETS FAT! Anorexic Ox 2. Electrons always flow from the anode to the cathode! Half Reactions 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- Zn electrode Cu electrode Lose e- (Table J) Gains e- (Table J) Oxidized Anode (-) Cu+2 Zn+2 Zn Reduced Cathode(+) Zn+2 ZnSO4 Cu+2 CuSO4 Will this go on forever? Cu Half Reactions Zn electrode Cu electrode Lose e- (Table J) Gains e- (Table J) Oxidized Reduced Anode (-) Cathode(+) Zn Cu Zn+2 ZnSO4 CuSO4 Will this go on forever? Electrochemistry 2e- 2e- 2e- Na+ Zn electrode Lose e- (Table J) Oxidized Zn+2 Cl- 2eNa+ Cl- Cl- Cl- Na+ Na+ Na+ 2e- 2e- Cu electrode Gains e- (Table J) Cu+2 Cl- Reduced Cathode(+) Anode (-) Cl- Zn Zn+2 ZnSO4 Na+ 2Cl- 2Na+ Cu+2 CuSO4 Cu Half Reactions In the reaction below, identify what is the oxidizing agent and the reducing agent. Ca + H2O CaO + H2 Electrochemistry 2e- 2e- 2e- Na+ Zn electrode Lose e- (Table J) Oxidized Zn+2 Cl- 2eNa+ Cl- Cl- Cl- Na+ Na+ Na+ 2e- 2e- Cu electrode Gains e- (Table J) Cu+2 Cl- Reduced Cathode(+) Anode (-) Cl- Zn Zn+2 ZnSO4 Na+ 2Cl- 2Na+ Cu+2 CuSO4 Cu Electrochemistry Summary: 1. Voltaic Cells – are spontaneous reactions 2. Electrons travel through the wire from more reactive metal to the less reactive metal (Table J) 3. Salt Bridge – permits the flow of ions 4. Red Cat gets fat! Electrochemistry These are NOT spontaneous reactions – they are forced by the addition of electricity! Occur within one container, not two separate cells! These reactions are used to plate metals, purify metals and separate compounds. Electrochemistry Cathode Anode Becomes negative Becomes positive Picks up + ions from solution Gets plated with the metal ion from the solution Sn Fe Loses positive ion (Sn+2) to solution During a laboratory activity, a student reacted a piece of zinc with 0.1M HCl(aq). Based on Reference Table J, identify one metal that does not react spontaneously with HCl(aq). Write out the oxidation and reduction half reactions for the voltaic cell below. (Do not need drawing in notes) NaBr Fe electrode K electrode Fe K Fe+2 K+1 Electrochemistry Electrochemical Cell Differences spontaneous non-spontaneous Anode - negative Anode - positive Needs two containers Needs one container Packet Review 16. NaBr Fe electrode K electrode Fe K Fe+2 K+1 Packet Review 16. Na2SO4 Al electrode Ag electrode Al Ag Al+3 Ag+1 Electrochemistry Anode Cathode Becomes positive Becomes negative Picks up + ions from solution Loses positive ion (Cu+2) to solution Cu Cu+2 Zn Gets plated with the metal ion from the solution Electrons ALWAYS flow from Anode to Cathode Electrochemistry And review packet Electrochemistry Anode Cathode Becomes positive Becomes negative Picks up + ions from solution Loses positive ion (Cu+2) to solution Cu Cu+2 Zn Gets plated with the metal ion from the solution Electrons ALWAYS flow from Anode to Cathode Electrochemistry Balancing Net Ionic Equations Done on the board Electrochemistry Ionic equation balancing Electrolysis Simulation C3H8O + CrO3 + H2SO4 Cr2(SO4)3 + C3H6O + H2O { Balancing equations using oxidation numbers BALANCING REACTIONS -conservation of mass and charge -we must make sure that the e- that one atom loses must equal the e- that another atom gains Try to balance this one: HNO3 + I2 HIO3 + NO2 + H2O BALANCING REACTIONS HNO3 + I2 HIO3 + NO2 + H2O 1. Assign ox #’s, write ½ reactions and cross out spectators N+5 + 1e- N+4 I20 - 5e- I+5 2. Balance each ½ reaction with respect to atoms and then e10 (N+5 + 1e- N+4 ) 1 ( I20 - 10e- 2I+5 ) 3. Distribute to all parts of the ½ reaction 10N+5 + 10e- 10N+4 I20 - 10e- 2I+5 BALANCING REACTIONS 3. Carry everything down and cross out e- 10N+5 + 10e- 10N+4 I20 - 10e- 2I+5 10N+5 + I20 10N+4 + 2I+5 4. Put coefficients back into equation and balance what is left. 10HNO3 + 1I2 10HIO3 + 2NO2 + 4 H2O BALANCING REACTIONS Sb + HNO3 Sb2O5 + NO + H2O 1. Assign ox #’s, write ½ reactions and cross out spectators Sb0 Sb2+5 + 5eN+5 + 3e- N+2 2. Balance each ½ reaction with respect to atoms and then e3 ( 2Sb0 Sb2+5 + 10e- ) 10 ( N+5 + 3e- N+2 ) 3. Distribute to all parts of the ½ reaction 6Sb0 3Sb2+5 + 30e10N+5 + 30e- 10N+2 Most missed Part 2 Questions 1. You have a voltaic cell with copper and aluminum as the electrodes. As the cell operates, the mass of the Al electrode decreases. Explain, in terms of particles, why this decrease in mass occurs. 2. Explain, in terms of electrical energy, how the operation of a voltaic cell differs from the operation of an electrolytic cell used in the Hall process. Include both the voltaic cell and the electrolytic cell in your answer. 3. Explain, in terms of ions, why molten cryolite conducts electricity. [Cryolite = Na3AlF6] BALANCING REACTIONS 3. Carry everything down and cross out e6Sb0 3Sb2+5 + 30e10N+5 + 30e- 10N+2 6Sb0 +10N+5 3Sb2+5 + 10N+2 4. Put coefficients back into equation and balance what is left. 6Sb + 10HNO3 3Sb2O5 + 10NO + 5 H2O Balance the following S + HNO3 SO2 + NO + H2O The Statue of Liberty is made of an iron framework covered by copper metal. Over time, a thin green layer(patina) forms on the outside. Where the iron came into contact with the copper a reaction occurred where the iron was oxidized. Why did this happen? Use your Reference Tables.