1 / 18

Section 4.4

Section 4.4. Oxidation-Reduction Reactions. Review of Reactions. Precipitation: cations and anions form insoluble ionic compound Neutralization : H + and OH - ions form H 2 O. A third kind of reaction involves electron transfers between reactants 

Download Presentation

Section 4.4

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. Section 4.4 Oxidation-Reduction Reactions

  2. Review of Reactions • Precipitation: cations and anions form insoluble ionic compound • Neutralization: H+ and OH- ions form H2O A third kind of reaction involves electron transfers between reactants Oxidation-reduction or REDOX reactions

  3. Oxidation-Reduction Reactions • An oxidation occurs when an atom or ion loses electrons. • A reduction occurs when an atom or ion gains electrons.

  4. Oxidation-Reduction Reactions One cannot occur without the other.

  5. Oxidation Numbers • Oxidation number: assigned to each element in a neutral compound or charged entity • Oxidation # = oxidation • Oxidation # = reduction

  6. 4 Rules for Oxidation Numbers 1. Elements in their elemental form have an oxidation number of 0. -Ex: H in H2 2. The oxidation number of a monatomic ion is the same as its charge. -Ex: K+ = +1; S2- = -2

  7. 3. Nonmetals tend to have negative oxidation numbers, except: • Oxygen is −2, except in the peroxide ion (O22-) in which it is −1. • Hydrogen is −1 when bonded to a metal, +1 when bonded to a nonmetal. • Fluorine always is −1. The other halogens are −1, BUT positive when combined with oxygen (oxyanions)

  8. 4. The sum of the oxidation numbers in a neutral compound is 0. The sum of the oxidation numbers in a polyatomic ion is the charge on the ion. -Ex: H3O+ = 3(+1) + (-2) = +1

  9. Oxidation Numbers

  10. Oxidation of Metals by Acids/Salts • Many kinds of redox reactions • Focus: redox reaction of metals with acid or salt A + BX AX + B Ex: Zn(s) + 2HBr(aq)  ZnBr2 (aq)+ H2 (g) What type of reaction does this look like?

  11. Displacement Reactions • The ion in a solution is displaced through oxidation of an element.

  12. Displacement with Metals and Acids • Metal + acid  salt + H2 Mg(s) + 2HCl(aq)  MgCl2(aq) + H2(g) 0------------------------+2 +1------------------------------0

  13. Displacement with Metals and Salts • Metals can be oxidized by aqueous solutions of salts Molecular Equation Fe(s) + Ni(NO3)2(aq)  Fe(NO3)2 (aq) + Ni(s) Net Ionic Equation Fe(s) + Ni 2+ (aq)  Fe 2+ (aq) + Ni(s)

  14. Remember… • Whenever one substance is oxidized (loses electrons/becomes more positive), some other substance must be reduced (gains electrons/becomes less positive).

  15. Activities Series • List of metals arranged in order of decreasing ease of oxidation • Alkali and alkaline earth metals: Active metals (most easily oxidized ) • Transition metals at the bottom of list:Noble metals (low reactivity) Any metal on the list can be oxidized by the ions of elements below it

  16. Activity Series

  17. Homework • 4.49-4.52 and 4.58

More Related