Topic 3 - redox Flashcards

1
Q

What is oxidation?

A

When atoms lose electrons, it is called oxidation

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2
Q

What is reduction?

A

When atoms gain electrons, it is called reduction​

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3
Q

Redox in ionic compounds​

A

An atom becomes an ion when it loses or gains one or more electrons​

The electrons are transferred from one atom to another so BOTH processes must occur simultaneously​
Reduction + oxidation is known as REDOX

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4
Q

Half Equations​

A

Oxidation:​
Mg → Mg2+ + 2e-​
Electrons are lost – the atom is oxidised​

Reduction:​
O2 + 4e- → 2O2-​
Electrons are gained – the atom is reduced​

The two half equations combined show the reaction between magnesium and oxygen:​
2Mg + O2 → 2MgO

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5
Q

Redox in covalent compounds​

A

It is easy to see where electrons are gained and lost in ionic compounds​

We can’t write half equations for reactions where covalent compounds are formed​

OXIDATION STATES are used instead

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6
Q

Oxidation states

A

In a molecule of an element, the oxidation states of each atom are zero, there is no difference in electronegativity so no transfer of electrons​
So in O2, both oxygen atoms have an oxidation state of 0​

If there is a difference in electronegativity then the electrons will be more attracted to one atom than the other​

The more electronegative atom can be given a number as if it has gained those electrons in the covalent bond​
In H2O, the oxygen has an oxidation state of -2. Each hydrogen has an oxidation state of +1​

Compounds and molecules always have an overall oxidation state of zero so the oxidation numbers will all add up to 0

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7
Q

Redox and Oxidation states

A

Oxidation occurs when the oxidation state increases​

Reduction occurs when the oxidation state decreases​

In the formation of water:​

the oxidation state of hydrogen changes from 0 to +1​

The hydrogen is oxidised​

The oxidation state of oxygen changes from 0 to -2​
The oxygen is reduced

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8
Q

Other reactions

A

Not all reactions are redox reactions​

If the oxidation state for each atom do not change, it is not redox​

E.g. ​
HCl + NaOH → NaCl + H2O​
+1 -1 +1 -2 +1 +1 -1 (2x+1) -2​

Each compound’s oxidation states add up to 0​

Each atom has the same oxidation state throughout so this is not a redox reaction

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9
Q

Variable oxidation states​

A

The transition metals have variable oxidation states because their highest energy electrons are in the 3d sub-shell​

When a transition metal loses electrons to form a positive ion, the 4s electrons are lost first, followed by the 3d electrons​

The maximum oxidation state increases as you go along the period until manganese, which has a maximum oxidation state of +7 (2 from 4s and 5 from 3d)​

eg. Scandium and zinc only have one oxidation state when in a compound​
Other metals in P4 have two or more oxidation states​
Iron has possible oxidation states of +2 or +3, written as Fe(II) and Fe(III)

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10
Q

Uses of transition metals​

A

Usual metallic properties make them useful for various purposes​

The variable oxidation states make transition metals and their compounds useful as catalysts:​

Iron used for Haber process​

Platinum used in catalytic converters​

Vanadium (V) oxide used to make sulfur dioxide​

Manganese (IV) oxide used for decomposition of hydrogen peroxide

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11
Q

Transition metal compounds as catalysts

A

Their use as catalysts is due to their ability to change between oxidation states​

E.g. Manganese (IV) oxide + hydrogen peroxide → manganese (VII) oxide + water + oxygen​
2MnO2 + 5H2O2 → Mn2O7 + 5H2O +O2​

Then manganese (VII) oxide → Manganese (IV) oxide + oxygen​
2Mn2O7 → 4MnO2 + 3O2​

This leaves the Manganese (IV) oxide ready to be used again

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