Title: Ch' 20 OxidationReduction Reactions
1Ch. 20 Oxidation-Reduction Reactions
2Oxidation
- Originally meant the combination of an element
with oxygen to produce oxides
2Fe (s) 3O2 (g) ? FeO2 (s)
3Oxidation
- Can involve burning gasoline or wood burns in
air to produce CO2
4Other Oxidizing Agents
- Bleach (NaClO)
- Hydrogen Peroxide (H2O2)
5Reduction
- The opposite of oxidation- originally meant the
loss of oxygen
6Redox Reactions
- Oxidation-reduction Reactions
- Oxidation is loss of electrons or gain of oxygen
- Reduction is gain of electrons or loss of oxygen
7Redox Reactions
- Mg S ? Mg 2 S 2-
- Magnesium Sulfur Magnesium
Sulfur - Atom Atom Ion
Ion - Mg? Mg 2 2 e- (Loses 2 e-) oxidized
- S ? S 2- (gains 2 e-) reduced
?
8- Reducing Agent the substance that loses
electrons - Oxidizing Agent The substance that gains
electrons - Mg S ? MgS
Oxidizing Agent
Oxidized
Reduced
Reducing Agent
9Covalent Compounds
- 2H2 (g) O2 (g) ? 2H2O (l)
Oxidized Gains Oxygen
10Rules for Covalent Products
- For carbon compounds the addition of oxygen OR
the removal of hydrogen is always oxidation
11Corrosion
- Water in the environment, salts, and acids
accelerate the rates of corrosion - Salts and acids make the transfer of electrons
easier
2 Fe (s) O2 (g) 2 H2O (l) ? Fe(OH)2 (s)
12Noble Metals
- Gold and platinum are called noble metals because
they are resistant to corrosion
13Oxidation Numbers
- A positive or negative number assigned to an atom
according to a set of rules - Chemical book-keeping device
14Oxidation Numbers
- In binary ionic compounds, oxidation numbers
equal ionic charges - NaCl ? Na Cl- ? Na ox 1, Cl ox -1
- CaCl2 ? Ca 2 2Cl- ? Ca ox 2, Cl ox -1
15Oxidation Numbers
- As a general rule oxidation numbers are the
charge if the electrons are assigned to the more
electronegative element - H2O
- Oxygen is more electronegative
- O Ox -2
- H Ox 1
- H2O
1 -2
16Rules for Assigning Oxidation Numbers
- 1. The oxidation number of a monatomic ion is
equal to its charge (Fe 3 ? 3)
17Rules for Assigning Oxidation Numbers
- 2. The oxidation number for hydrogen in a
compound is always 1 EXCEPT NaH where it is -1
18Rules for Assigning Oxidation Numbers
- 3. The oxidation number for oxygen in a compound
is -2 EXCEPT in peroxides, such as H2O2 where it
is -1
19Rules for Assigning Oxidation Numbers
- 4. The oxidation number of an element is always
0 ( K ? 0, O2 ? 0)
20Rules for Assigning Oxidation Numbers
- For any neutral compound, the sum of the
oxidation numbers must equal 0 - CaCl2 ? Ca 2 2Cl- ? 2 2- 0
21Rules for Assigning Oxidation Numbers
- For a polyatomic ion, the sum of the oxidation
numbers must equal the ionic charge of the ion. - NO3- ? O (-2) X 3 -6 ? N must 5
- SO42- ?S ?
- K2CrO4 ? Cr?
- K2Cr2O7 ? Cr ?
22Oxidation Number Changes in Chemical Reactions
- 1 5 -2 0 2 5 -2
0 - 2AgNO3 (aq) Cu(s) ? Cu(NO3)2 (aq) 2Ag (s)
- Silver ions are reduced Ag ? Ag0
- Copper is oxidized Cu 0 ? Cu 2
23Examples
- Identify oxidation numbers for all atoms
- Identify which ions are being oxidized and which
are reduced - Identify the oxidizing and reducing agent
- 2H2 (g) O2 (g) ? 2H2O (l)
24Examples
- Identify oxidation numbers for all atoms
- Identify which ions are being oxidized and which
are reduced - Identify the oxidizing and reducing agent
- NH4NO2 (s) ? N2 (g) H2O (g)
- Hint consider each N in NH4NO2 separately
25Identifying Redox Reactions
- You can determine if a reaction is a redox
reaction by using oxidation numbers to keep track
of electrons - N2 (g) O2 (g) ? 2NO (g)
26Balancing Redox Reactions using Oxidation Numbers
- Start with a skeleton equation (unbalanced)
- Fe2O3 (s) CO (g) ? Fe (s) CO2 (g)
27Balancing Redox Reactions using Oxidation Numbers
- Assign oxidation numbers to all atoms in the
equation - 3 -2 2 -2 0
4 -2 - Fe2O3 (s) CO (g) ? Fe (s) CO2 (g)
28Balancing Redox Reactions using Oxidation Numbers
- Identify which atoms are oxidized and which are
reduced - 3 -2 2 -2 0
4 -2 - Fe2O3 (s) CO (g) ? Fe (s) CO2 (g)
- Fe is reduced
- C is oxidized
29Balancing Redox Reactions using Oxidation Numbers
- Use bracketing to connect atoms that undergo
oxidation and reduction - 3 -2 2 -2 0
4 -2 - Fe2O3 (s) CO (g) ? Fe (s) CO2 (g)
reduced -3
Oxidized 2
30Balancing Redox Reactions using Oxidation Numbers
- Make the total increase in oxidation number equal
to the total decrease in oxidation number by
using appropriate coefficients - 3 -2 2 -2
0 4 -2 - Fe2O3 (s) 3CO (g) ? 2Fe (s) 3CO2 (g)
-3 x 2 -6
2 x 3 6
31Balancing Redox Reactions using Oxidation Numbers
- Check to make sure the equation is balanced for
charges AND atoms - Fe2O3 (s) 3CO (g) ? 2Fe (s) 3CO2 (g)
32Balancing Redox Reactions using Half Reactions
- Half-reactions are equations that show either the
reduction or the oxidation of a species in a
redox reaction
33Balancing Redox Reactions using Half Reactions
- S (s) HNO3 (aq) ? SO2 (g) NO (g) H2O (l)
- 1. Write the unbalanced equation in ionic form
- S (s) H (aq) NO3- (aq) ? SO2 (g) NO (g)
H2O (l)
34Balancing Redox Reactions using Half Reactions
- 2. Write separate half reactions for the
oxidation and reduction processes - S (s) H NO3- (aq) ? SO2 (g) NO (g) H2O
(l) - 0 4 -2
- Oxidation S (s) ? SO2 (g)
- 5 -2 2
-2 - Reduction NO3- (aq) ? NO (g)
35Balancing Redox Reactions using Half Reactions
- Balance the atoms in the half reactions
- Oxidation S (s) 2H2O (l) ? SO2 (g) 4H (aq)
- Reduction4 H(aq) NO3- (aq)?NO (g)2H2O (l)
36Balancing Redox Reactions using Half Reactions
- Add sufficient electrons to one side of the
reaction to balance the charges - Oxidation
- S (s) 2H2O (l) ? SO2 (g) 4H (aq) 4 e-
- Reduction
- 4 H(aq) NO3- (aq) 3 e- ?NO (g)2H2O (l)
37Balancing Redox Reactions using Half Reactions
- 5. Multiply each half reaction by an appropriate
number to make the number of electrons equal on
both sides - Oxidation
- (S (s) 2H2O (l) ? SO2 (g) 4H (aq) 4 e-)3
- 3S (s) 6H2O (l) ? 3SO2 (g) 12H (aq) 12 e-
- Reduction
- (4 H(aq) NO3- (aq) 3 e- ?NO (g)2H2O (l))4
- 16 H(aq) 4NO3- (aq) 12e- ?4NO (g)8 H2O (l)
38Balancing Redox Reactions using Half Reactions
- Add the half reactions to show an overall
equation - Oxidation
- 3S (s) 6H2O (l) ? 3SO2 (g) 12H (aq) 12 e-
- Reduction
- 16 H(aq) 4NO3- (aq) 12e- ?4NO (g)8 H2O (l)
- 3S (s) 6H2O (l) 16H(aq) 4NO3- (aq) 12e-
? 3SO2 (g) 12H(aq) 12 e- 4NO (g)8H2O (l)
39Balancing Redox Reactions using Half Reactions
- Subtract terms that are on both the left and the
right side (spectator ions) - 3S (s) 6H2O (l) 16H(aq) 4NO3- (aq) 12e-
? 3SO2 (g) 12H (aq) 12 e- 4NO (g)8H2O (l) - 3S (s) 4H(aq) 4NO3- (aq) ? 3SO2 (g) (aq)
4NO (g) 2H2O (l)
40Balancing Redox Reactions using Half Reactions
- 8. Add the ions and balance the equation
- 3S (s) 4H(aq) 4NO3- (aq) ? 3SO2 (g) (aq)
4NO (g) 2H2O (l) - 3S (s) 4HNO3 (aq) ? 3SO2 (g) (aq) 4NO (g)
-
2H2O (l)