Oxidation and Reduction Flashcards
For Test 3
1
Q
What is oxidation?
A
OIL RIG
- Oxidation is Loss of electrons.
- Oxidation: Increases Oxidation #. (Gain charge)
- Combustion is an example of oxidation, adding oxygen
2
Q
What is reduction?
A
OIL RIG
- Reduction is the gain of electrons.
- Reduction decreases the oxidation #. (Lose charge.)
3
Q
What are the rules (in order) for counting oxidation numbers?
A
- Each atom in a free element has ox # = 0.
- Simple monatomic ions have ox # = charge on the ion.
- The sum of all ox #’s in a molecule or a polyatomic ion = the overall charge.
- So the nonmetals have to match the metals, you know what it should be.
- Flourine (F) has ox # = -1.
- Hydrogen (H) has ox # = +1.
- Except in hydrides with metals, ox# = -1. (Ex: NaH, H= -1.)
- Oxygen (O) has ox # = -2.
- Except in peroxides, when there are two oxygens bonded together, O = -1.
4
Q
What are redox reactions?
A
- Single replacement reaction
- Transfer of electrons
- Recognize change in oxidation number, transfer of O or H
5
Q
What are the rules for balancing redox reactions?
A
- Separate into half reactions.
- Balance all elements besides H and O.
- Balance O by adding H2O to opposite side.
- Balance H by adding adding H+ to opposite side.
- Count up net charge and balance with electrons
- Multiply by an integer to get electrons to cancel
- Add half reactions and cancel species on both sides
- In a BASIC solution, then cancel H+ by adding as many OH- as H+ to both sides. Combine H+ and OH- to make H2O, cancel out.
- Check that charges AND atoms are balanced.
6
Q
What is the oxidizing agent?
A
- The susbtance that accepts electrons and is reduced
- It allows the other to lose electrons and be oxidized
- It’s the full substance in the equation. (Not just the element)
7
Q
What is the reducing agent?
A
- The substance that gives electrons and is oxidized
- It allows something else to be reduced
- It’s the full substance in the equation. (Not just the oxidized element)
8
Q
What is a redox reaction?
A
- Electron transfer reactions
- Changes in oxidation numbers occur
- Something is oxidized and something is reduced
- Occurs in an excess of acid or base
- Includes single replacement reactions and combustion reactions (NOT double replacement)
- The reaction of an acid with a metal is a redox reaction in which the metal is oxidized and the acid is reduced
9
Q
Describe hydrogen as an oxidizing reagent
A
- Hydrogen is only strong enough to oxidize some metals
- A metal more active than hydrogen will dissolve
- A metal less active than hydrogen won’t dissolve
10
Q
What are nonoxidizing acids vs. oxidizing acids?
A
- Non-oxidizing: if the anion is a weaker oxidizing agent than hydrogen
- HCl, H2SO4, H3PO4 - exception for phosphoric acid if hot & concentrated
- Oxidizing: if the anion is a stronger oxidizing agent than the hydrogen
- HNO3, H3PO4 (if hot and concentrated)
11
Q
What is a single replacement reaction?
A
- When one element replaces another in a compound
- Type of redox reaction
12
Q
What is the activity series?
A
- Use it to see which metals are “active” / more easily oxidized
- A metal is active if it’s more active than hydrogen
- A more active metal will give up its electron
- More active metals can dissolve in nonaxidizing acids, where H is the oxidizing agent (ex; HCl, H3PO4, H2SO4)
- Less active metals (gold, mercury, silver, copper) need oxidizing acids where something other than H acts as oxidizing agent (ex: HNO3, H2SO4 hot, conc)
- Predict the outcome of single replacement redox reactions
- The element that is more easily oxidized will replace the one that is less easily oxidized.
- Ex: In HCl, an active metal like lithium will displace hydrogen and produce H2 gas and a metal salt. Whereas copper is less active than hydrogen, so nothing will happen to copper in HCl.
- The element that is more easily oxidized will replace the one that is less easily oxidized.
13
Q
What are ionic and metal oxides?
A
- Oxides are the products after combination with oxygen
- Metal –> ionic oxides
- Nonmetals –> molecular oxides
14
Q
Combustion
A
- Fast combination with O2
- O2 with organic compounds –> CO2 + H2O
- When a hydroxarbon is combusted without enough oxygen, carbon monoxide instead of CO2. With even less oxygen, just elemental C.
- If sulfur is in the compound, sulfur dioxide SO2 is an additional product
- O2 with metals –> metal oxides
- Fast = combustion, slow = corrosion/tarnishing
- O2 with nonmetals –> nonmetal oxides