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Reduction - Oxidation Chapters
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Oxidation Numbers (States)
Positive, negative or neutral values assigned to an atom to keep track of the number of electrons lost or gained. Charge
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Oxidation Number Rules
Elements alone (not in a compound) = 0 Example: Cu, N2 Monatomic ion (single atom) = charge Example: Na+, Cl-, Mg+2, O-2
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Oxidation Number Rules
Compound sum of all atoms = 0 Example: H2O H + H + O = 0 Polyatomic ion sum of all atoms = charge Example: NO3- N + O + O + O = -1
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Common Oxidation Numbers
Group 1 +1 Group 2 +2 Group 13 +3 Group 15 -3 Group 16 -2 Group 17 -1 Some exceptions to each above
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Redox Reactions Reduction – Oxidation, or redox, involves the transfer of electrons Reduction – gain of electrons Oxidation – loss of electrons
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Redox Reactions LEO goes GER Lose Electrons Oxidation
Gain Electrons Reduction
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Redox Reaction Mg + Cl2 MgCl2 Mg - lost electrons (oxidation)
+2 -1 Mg + Cl2 MgCl2 Mg - lost electrons (oxidation) Cl – gained electrons (reduction)
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Redox Reaction 2Al + 3Ni(NO3)2 3Ni + 2Al(NO3)3
+2 +5 -2 +3 +5 -2 2Al + 3Ni(NO3)2 3Ni + 2Al(NO3)3 Al - lost electrons (oxidation) Ni – gained electrons (reduction)
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Redox Reaction Zn + CuSO4 Cu + ZnSO4
One element loses electrons (oxidation) One element gains electrons (reduction) All other ions are spectators
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Net Ionic Equation Shows only the ions involved in the redox reaction, not spectator ions Still shows conservation of mass and charge Zn + CuSO4 Cu + ZnSO4 Zn + Cu+2 Cu + Zn+2
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Net Ionic Example Zn + 2HCl H2 + ZnCl2 Zn + 2H+ H2 + Zn2+
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Half Reactions Only shows one element and how many electrons are gained or lost Must maintain conservation of mass and charge
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Half Reactions Zn + CuSO4 Cu + ZnSO4 Zn + Cu+2 Cu + Zn+2 Net Ionic
Zn Zn e- Oxidation Cu e- Cu Reduction
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Oxidation Loss of Electrons Examples: Zn Zn e- 2Cl- Cl e-
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Reduction Gain of electrons Examples: Ag+ + e- Ag Cl e- 2Cl-
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Balancing Reactions The number of electrons lost must equal the number of electrons gained Example: 2Na + ZnCl2 Zn + 2NaCl Zn e- Zn 2(Na Na + + e- )
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Balancing Example Ti Ti+4 + 4e- 2(Cu+2 + 2e- Cu)
Ti + 2Cu+2 Ti Cu Ti + 2CuCl2 TiCl Cu
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Spontaneous Reactions
More active element does not want to be alone Table J Metal being oxidized must be ABOVE metal being reduced for spontaneous reactions to occur Reversed for Nonmetals
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Spontaneous Reactions
Examples: Zn + CuSO4 Cu + ZnSO4 CaSO4 + Mg Ca + MgSO4 Zn + 2HCl H2 + ZnCl2 F NaI I NaF YES NO YES YES
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Electrochemical Cells
any device that converts chemical energy into electrical energy or electrical energy into chemical energy Two types Voltaic (Chemical) Electrolytic
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Electrochemical Cells
Electrode – metal conductor in an electrical circuit that carries electrons to or from another substance Cathode – electrode where reduction takes place Anode – electrode where oxidation takes place
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Voltaic Cell Flow of electrons is spontaneous based on electronegativity and ionization energy Chemical energy is converted to electrical energy Examples: Batteries
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Voltaic Cell
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Electrochemical Cell Components
Salt Bridge Allows for the passage of ions, not electrons Switch Device that opens(turns off) and closes(turns on) circuit
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Voltaic Cell
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Electrolysis Process in which electrical energy is converted to chemical energy Example: 2H2O 2H2 + O2
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Electrolytic Cells Electrons are pushed by an outside power source
Electrical energy is converted to chemical energy Examples: Electroplating, Electropolishing
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Electrolytic Cell
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Voltaic or Electrolytic?
Zn + NiCl2 Ni + ZnCl2 Cu + ZnSO4 Zn + CuSO4 2H2O 2H2 + O2 2NaCl 2Na + Cl2 Voltaic Electrolytic Voltaic Electrolytic Electrolytic
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