Gas Forming Rxns, Driving Forces, and Redox Chapter 5 part 3
Gas Forming Reactions Carbonate (CO 3 2- )/bicarbonate (HCO 3 - ) react with acid (H + ) to make CO 2 and H 2 O NaHCO 3 (s) + HCl --> Net ionic: NaCl + CO 2 (g) + H 2 O NaHCO 3 + H + --> Na + + CO 2 (g) + H 2 O
Gas Forming Reactions Sulfite (SO 3 2- ) reacts with acid (H + ) to make SO 2 and water
“Driving Forces” The formation of a special product moves these reaction forward: Precipitation - solid Acid-Base - water Gas-Forming - gas molecule
“Driving Forces” Product or Reactant Favored? 2Na 3 PO 4 + 3Ni(NO 3 ) 2 --> 6 NaNO 3 + Ni 3 (PO 4 ) 2 CaCl 2 + H 2 O --> Ca(OH) 2 + HNO 3
“Driving Forces” The transfer of e- moves redox reactions forward An oxidized substance provides e- to the reduced substance
Redox Reactions Oxidation and Reduction occur together OILRIG Oxidation Oxidation - “loss of e-” the oxidation # (charge) element gets higher Reduction Reduction - “gain of e-” the ox # of element gets lower
Redox Reactions HCl + Zn --> ? + ? Show the movement of e-
Recognizing REDOX First assign ox # to each element The charges must change in a redox rx If element ends up with a higher ox# its oxidized If element ends up with a lower ox# it is reduced
Oxidation Numbers Refer to the handout
Assign Ox# to the Element NH 3 CaCl 2 ClO 4 - ClO 3 - H 3 PO 4 C3H8C3H8C3H8C3H8 Oxidation number of F in HF?