4a - obtaining and using metals Flashcards
Oxidation
Oxidation can be defined as the gain of oxygen by an element or compound.
Examples
* Magnesium is oxidised to make magnesium oxide.
* 2Mg + O₂ -> 2MgO
* Magnesium + oxygen -> magnesium oxide
Reduction
Reduction can be defined as the loss of oxygen from a compound.
Examples
* Zinc oxide is reduced to make zinc.
* 2ZnO + C -> 2Zn + CO₂
* zinc oxide + carbon + zinc carbon dioxide
Reduction and oxidation
Reduction and oxidation happen simultaneously. Oxygen is removed from one compound and added to something else.
Example
Both reduction and oxidation occur when iron oxide reacts with carbon monoxide.
* Fe203 + 3CO → 2Fe + 3CO2
* iron oxide + carbon monoxide → iron carbon dioxide
* Iron oxide is reduced to iron (as oxygen is removed).
* Carbon monoxide is oxidised to carbon dioxide (as oxygen is added).
Combustion reactions
Combustion reactions involve oxidation and reduction. They’re always exothermic.
Example
* The reaction of methane with oxygen is a combustion reaction.
* CH4 + 20₂ -> CO₂ + 2H₂O
* Methane + oxygen -> carbon dioxide + water
* Both the carbon and hydrogen are oxidised - they gain oxygen.
* The oxygen molecules are reduced as the oxygen atoms get split up by the reaction.
The reactivity series
- The reactivity of a metal is derived from how easily it forms cations (positive ions). The metals at the top of the reactivity series are the most reactive- they easily lose their electrons to form cations. Reactive metals also gain oxygen (are oxidised) more easily.
- The metals at the bottom of the reactivity series are less reactive - they don’t give up their electrons to form cations as easily. They’re more resistant to oxidation than the metals higher up the reactivity series.
- As well as the metals, carbon is often included in reactivity series - a metal’s position in the reactivity series compared to carbon dictates how it’s extracted from its ore.
- Hydrogen is included in the reactivity series too - this shows the reactivity of metals with dilute acids.
Finding an order of reactivity from experiments
If you compare the relative reactivity of different metals with either an acid or water and put them in order from most reactive to the least reactive, the order you get is a reactivity series. The higher a metal is in the reactivity series, the more easily it reacts with the water or acid.
You can also investigate the reactivity of metals by measuring the temperature change of the reaction with an acid or water over a set time period. If you use the same mass and surface area of metal each time, then the more reactive the metal, the greater the temperature change should be.
Reactions of metals with acids
Acid + metal -> salt + hydrogen
You can see how reactive different metals are by monitoring the rate of hydrogen production when they react with an acid. The more reactive the metal, the faster the reaction will go. The speed of the reaction is indicated by the rate at which bubbles of hydrogen are given off - a speedy reaction is shown by bubbles being produced rapidly.
You could measure the production of hydrogen more precisely by attaching a gas syringe to the test tube at the beginning of the reaction and measuring the volume of gas given off at regular time intervals.
test for hydrogen
The production of hydrogen can be detected using the burning splint test. This involves putting a lit splint at the mouth of the tube containing the metal and the acid. If hydrogen is there, you’ll hear a ‘squeaky pop’. The more reactive the metal, the more hydrogen is produced in a certain amount of time and the louder the ‘squeaky pop’.
Reactions of metals with water
Metal + water → metal hydroxide + hydrogen
Metal + water vapour → metal oxide + hydrogen
Metals that aren’t very reactive, such as magnesium, zinc and iron won’t react much with cold water. They will however react with steam.
Reactions of metals with salt solutions
As well as using water and acids to determine the reactivity of metals, you can use salt solutions (solutions containing a dissolved metal compound). The advantage of this is it allows you to directly compare the reactivity of one metal with another.
If you put a reactive metal into a solution of a less reactive metal salt, the reactive metal will replace the less reactive metal in the salt.
Example - If you put an iron nail in a solution of copper sulphate, the more reactive iron will displace the less reactive copper from the salt.
Fe + CuSO4 -> FeSO4 + Cu
Iron + copper sulphate -> iron sulphate + copper
If you put a less reactive metal into a solution of a more reactive metal salt, nothing will happen.
Redox reactions
Redox reactions occur when electrons are transferred between substances.
* Oxidation is a loss of electrons. OIL
* Reduction is a gain of electrons RIG.
Both oxidation and reduction happen at the same time, hence the term redox. Oxidation and reduction can also be defined in terms of loss or gain of oxygen but on this page, they’re referring to the transfer of electrons.
Displacement reactions and redox
Displacement reactions are a type of redox reaction. In displacement reactions, a more reactive element reacts to take the place of a less reactive element in a compound.
In displacement reactions involving metals and salts, a more reactive metal will displace a less reactive metal in a salt solution. The more reactive metal loses electrons and the less reactive metal gains electrons. So, during a displacement reaction, the more reactive metal is oxidised and the less reactive metal is reduced.
If you place zinc in a solution of copper sulphate (CuSO4), the more reactive zinc will displace the less reactive copper from the solution. You end up with zinc sulphate solution and copper metal.
Extracting metals from their ores
Some unreactive metals, such as gold and platinum, are present in the Earth’s crust as uncombined elements, rather than as a compound. These metals can be mined straight out of the ground, but they usually need to be refined before they can be used.
The rest of the metals we get by extracting them from metal ores, which are mined from the ground. A metal ore is a rock which contains enough metal to make it profitable to extract the metal from it. In many cases the ore is an oxide of the metal.
e.g., The main aluminium ore is called bauxite. it’s aluminium oxide (Al2O3).
Extraction of metals by reduction with carbon
A metal below carbon in the reactivity series can be extracted from its ore by reducing it in a reaction with carbon. In this reaction, the ore is reduced as oxygen is removed from it and carbon gains oxygen so is oxidised.
Extraction of metals by electrolysis
Metals higher than carbon in the reactivity series, or that react in different ways with carbon, have to be extracted using electrolysis, which is expensive. The metal ore is melted, then an electric current is passed through it. The metal is discharged at the cathode and the non-metal at the anode.