1 / 15

OXIDATION – REDUCTION REACTIONS

OXIDATION – REDUCTION REACTIONS. Pp 258 – 261 + Chapter 18 in book HW: Read pp 258 – 261 several times. Answer active reading Q on p. 258 Do p. 261 practice problem 8.5. OXIDATION. Originally referred to oxygen combining with other elements to form oxides

ciara
Download Presentation

OXIDATION – REDUCTION REACTIONS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. OXIDATION – REDUCTION REACTIONS • Pp 258 – 261 + Chapter 18 in book • HW: Read pp 258 – 261 several times. • Answer active reading Q on p. 258 • Do p. 261 practice problem 8.5

  2. OXIDATION • Originally referred to oxygen combining with other elements to form oxides • Principal sources of energy involve oxidation – combustion of gas, food metabolism in cells, etc. • Oxidation now has a broader meaning – refers to more than just “burning” and forming oxides • Bleaching and rusting are oxidation processes

  3. REDUCTION • Opposite of oxidation • Originally meant the loss of oxygen • Iron ore is reduced in the production of metallic iron by heating it with charcoal– oxygen is removed from the ore

  4. REDOX REACTIONS • Oxidation and reduction occur simultaneously • Can’t have one without the other! • When producing iron from iron ore, the removed oxygen combines with carbon and forms carbon dioxide.

  5. REDOX TODAY • Includes many reactions that do not involve oxygen • Oxidation is redefined as complete or partial loss of electrons OR gain of oxygen • Reduction is complete or partial gain of electrons OR loss of oxygen

  6. REDOX REACTIONS All redox reactions are also classified in other ways: ie, single replacement, combustion, etc. The opposite is not always true Example: some double replacement rxs are not redox – why? Electrons are not transferred

  7. LEO the lion goes GER

  8. Oxidation Complete loss of e- ionic reactions Shift of e- away from atom in covalent bond Gain of oxygen Loss of hydrogen by a covalent compound Increase in oxidation number Reduction Complete gain of e- ionic reactions Shift of e- toward an atom in a covalent bond Loss of oxygen Gain of hydrogen by a covalent compound Decrease in oxidation number Processes leading to oxidation and reduction

  9. Oxidation Numbers • Positive or negative number assigned to an atom and is equal to the ionic charge • Ex. Br1- has an oxidation number of -1, Fe3+ has an oxidation number of +3 • Hydrogen has a +1 charge except in metal hydrides it is -1 (NaH) • Uncombined atoms have an oxidation number of 0 • For neutral compounds sum of oxidation numbers is 0

  10. Changing oxidation numbers • In polyatomic ions, the sum of the oxidation numbers is equal to the charge on the ion. • EX. SO32- Oxygen always (almost) has an oxidation number of -2 so when 3 oxygens bond with 1 sulfur to form a sulfite ion, the oxidation number of sulfur must be +4. • What is sulfur’s oxidation number in SO42-?

  11. More Changing!! • Determine the oxidation number for sulfur in each of the following: • H2S Na2SO4 • S2Cl2 • Determine the oxidation number for the bold element in each of the following: • NaClO4 AlPO4 AsO43-

  12. Oxidation changes in reactions • Increase in oxidation # indicates oxidation • Decrease in oxidation # indicates reduction • Use oxidation numbers to determine what is oxidized and what is reduced +1 +5 -2 0 +2 +5 -2 0 • 2AgNO3 + Cu  Cu(NO3)2 + 2Ag

  13. Using oxidation # • Use oxidation numbers in an equation to determine what is oxidized and reduced 0 +1-1 +1-1 0 • Cl2 + 2HBr  2HCl + Br2 • Chlorine is reduced – oxidation # 0 to -1 • Bromine is oxidized – oxidation # -1 to 0

  14. Identifying Redox Reactions • Any type of reaction may be redox • Assign oxidation numbers to all elements to see if there is a transfer of electrons • If no change, not redox • If there is a change, is redox

  15. Balancing Redox Reactions half reaction method • Write oxidation states • Decide which elements are being oxidized and reduced • Write ½ reactions, bringing full terms containing oxidized and reduced elements • Balance all elements except O & H in normal way. • Balance O’s by adding H2O to appropriate side • Balance H’s by adding H+’s to appropriate side • Balance charge by adding e-’s to appropriate side • Multiply 1/ rxs by an integer to equalize e-’s • Combine, cancel, rewrite & check

More Related