Transcript
Page 1: Oxidation-Reduction  Reactions

OXIDATION-REDUCTION REACTIONSREDOX

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Oxygen Reactions• Early chemists saw oxidation only as the combination of

an element with oxygen to produce an oxide. • burning of fuel is an oxidation reaction that uses oxygen. • e.g. when methane (CH4), a component of natural gas,

burns in air, it oxidizes and forms oxides of carbon and hydrogen.

• one oxide of carbon is carbon dioxide, CO2.

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• Not all oxidation involves burning. • iron turns to rust, it oxidizes to compounds such as iron(III) oxide (Fe2O3).

Not just Burning…

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• liquid household bleach contains sodium hypochlorite (NaClO)• releases oxygen• oxidizes stains to a colorless form.

• Powdered bleaches may contain:• calcium hypochlorite (Ca(ClO)2), • sodium perborate (NaBO3), or • sodium percarbonate (2Na2CO3 · 3H2O2).

Bleaching stains:

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• Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) also releases oxygen when it decomposes.

• It is both a bleach and a mild antiseptic that kills bacteria by oxidizing them.

• (insert dumb bar joke here)

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Reduction• opposite of oxidation. • Originally, reduction meant the loss of oxygen from a

compound. • The reduction of iron ore to metallic iron involves the

removal of oxygen from iron(III) oxide. • The reduction is accomplished by heating the ore with

carbon, usually in the form of coke.(what they make at Tonawanda Coke).

• 2Fe2O3 + 3C 4Fe + 3CO2

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What is Redox?• Oxidation and reduction always occur simultaneously.

• No oxidation occurs without reduction, and no reduction occurs without oxidation.

• The substance gaining oxygen is oxidized, while the substance losing oxygen is reduced.

• Reactions that involve these processes are therefore called oxidation-reduction reactions.

• are also known as redox reactions.

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Electron Transfer• Modern concepts of oxidation extend to include many

reactions that do not involve oxygen. • Oxygen is the most electronegative element next to

fluorine• It’s an “electron stealer” • As a result, when oxygen bonds with an atom of a

different element (other than fluorine), electrons from that atom shift toward oxygen.

• Redox reactions are currently understood to involve any shift of electrons between reactants.

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New Definitions (must know)• Oxidation - a process that involves complete or partial

loss of electrons OR a gain of oxygen; it results in an increase in the oxidation number of an atom

• Reduction - a process that involves a complete or partial gain of electrons OR the loss of oxygen; it results in a decrease in the oxidation number of an atom

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Memory aid:

• “LEO says GER” •Lose Electrons Oxidation •Gain Electrons Reduction

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More confusing vocab…• oxidizing agent - the substance in a redox reaction that

accepts electrons • in the reaction, the oxidizing agent gets reduced • Reduced = gains electrons

• reducing agent - the substance in a redox reaction that donates electrons • in the reaction, the reducing agent gets oxidized • Oxidized = loses electrons

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Corrosion• the electrochemical reaction between a material, usually a

metal, and its environment that produces a deterioration of the material and its properties.

• Iron, a common metal often used in the form of the alloy steel, corrodes by being oxidized to ions of iron by oxygen.

• Oxygen, the oxidizing agent, is reduced to oxide ions (in compounds such as Fe2O3) or to hydroxide ions.

• The following equations describe the corrosion of iron to iron hydroxides in moist conditions.

• 2Fe(s) + O2(g) + 2H2O(l) → 2Fe(OH)2(s) • 4Fe(OH)2(s) + O2(g) + 2H2O(l) → 4Fe(OH)3(s)

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• Corrosion occurs more rapidly in the presence of salts and acids. • Cars rust faster in where there is salt on

roads • These substances produce

electrically conducting solutions that make electron transfer easier. • The salt doesn’t rust that car, it just

makes it easier to rust faster.• The corrosion of some metals can

be a desirable feature.• Verdigris

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Corrosion Resistance• Gold and platinum are “noble metals” because they are very

resistant to losing their electrons by corrosion. • Other metals lose electrons easily but are protected from

extensive corrosion by the oxide coating formed on their surface. • Aluminium oxidizes to form a coating of very tightly packed

aluminium oxide particles. • coating protects the aluminium object from further corrosion. • Iron forms a coating when it corrodes, but the coating of iron

oxide that forms is not tightly packed. • Water and air can penetrate the coating and attack the iron

metal below it. • The corrosion continues until the iron object becomes only a pile

of rust.

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Controlling Corrosion

• corrosion of a steel support pillar of a bridge or the hull of an oil tanker is much more serious and costly.

• To prevent corrosion, the metal surface may be coated with oil, paint, plastic, or another metal.

• These coatings exclude air and water from the surface preventing corrosion.

• If the coating is scratched or worn away, the exposed metal will begin to corrode.

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Another Control method• one metal is “sacrificed,” allowed to corrode, in order to save

another metal. • e.g., to protect an iron object, a piece of magnesium (or

another active metal ) may be placed in electrical contact with the iron.

• when oxygen and water attack the iron object, the iron atoms lose electrons as the iron begins to be oxidized.

• magnesium is a better reducing agent than iron (more easily oxidized - reference table J), the magnesium transfers electrons to the iron, preventing their oxidation to iron ions.

• So, the magnesium is “sacrificed” by oxidation and protects the iron in the process.

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More example of sacrifice metals• zinc and magnesium blocks are sometimes attached to

piers and ship hulls to prevent corrosion damage in areas submerged in water.

• Underground pipelines and storage tanks may be connected to magnesium blocks for protection.

• It is easier and cheaper to replace a block of magnesium or zinc than to replace a bridge or a pipeline.

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Assigning Oxidation Numbers• positive or negative number assigned to an atom to

indicate its degree of oxidation or reduction. • a bonded atom’s oxidation number is the charge that it

would have if the electrons in the bond were assigned to the atom of the more electronegative element.

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Rules For Oxidation Numbers (p. 1)• Monatomic ions have the charge of the ion, Halogens are almost always -1, iron (III) is Fe+3

• Hydrogen is +1 except when bonded to a metal (like NaH), then it is -1

• Oxygen is -2 except in a peroxide (H2O2), then it is -1 and when bonded to fluorine, then it is postive.

• Crack out reference tables – Periodic Table

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Rules For Oxidation Numbers (p. 2)• Elements not bonded to anything are ZERO

• Neutral compound must total zero when adding oxidation numbers

• Polyatomic ions, use the chart in the reference tables.

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Almost Always…• Alkali Metals are +1• Alkaline Earths are +2• Halogens are -1• Oxygen is -2• IF there is a polyatomic ion, use the chart in the reference table and figure out what the other ion would be.

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Identifying Reactions• All chemical reactions can be assigned to one of two classes.

• #1 Redox - electrons are transferred from one reacting species to another. • single-replacement reactions, • synthesis reactions • decomposition reactions• combustion reactions

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• #2 Other reactions - no electron transfer occurs. • double-replacement reactions • acid-base reactions

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