Acids with Reactive Metals (DP IB Chemistry)
Revision Note
Acids with Reactive Metals
Metals and acids
The typical reaction of a metal and an acid can be summarised as
acid + metal → salt + hydrogen
For example:
2HCl (aq) + Zn (s) → ZnCl2 (aq) + H2 (g)
hydrochloric acid + zinc → zinc chloride* + hydrogen
H2SO4 (aq) + Fe (s) → FeSO4 (aq) + H2 (g)
sulfuric acid + iron → iron(II) sulfate* + hydrogen
*zinc chloride and iron(II) sulfate are salts
A salt is an ionic compound formed when the hydrogen of an acid is replaced by a metal or another positive ion
Clearly, the extent of the reaction depends on the reactivity of the metal and the strength of the acid
Very reactive metals would react dangerously with acids and these reactions are not usually carried out
Metals low in reactivity do not react at all
For instance, copper does not react with dilute acids
Stronger acids will react more vigorously with metals than weak acids
What signs of reaction would be expected to be different between the two?
Faster reaction seen as:
more effervescence
the metal dissolves faster
Ionic Equations
The reactions of acids and metals can be written as ionic equations showing only the species that has changed in the reaction
Zinc reacts with hydrochloric acid to give a salt and hydrogen
Zinc metal is being oxidised to a zin ion as shown in the table
Full equation | 2HCl (aq) + Zn (s) → ZnCl2 (aq) + H2 (g) |
---|---|
Ionic equation | 2H+ (aq) + Zn (s) → Zn2+ (aq) + H2 (g) 2H+ (aq) |
Reducing agent | Zn (s) Zn is being oxidised to Zn2+ (0 to +2) |
Oxidising agent | H+ (aq) in HCl (aq) H+ is being reduced to H2 (+1 to 0) |
Table to show the relative reducing power of metals
Mg | strongest reducing agent - most readily becomes oxidised |
---|---|
Al | |
Zn | |
Fe | |
Pb | |
H | |
Cu | |
Ag | weakest oxidising agent - least readily becomes oxidised |
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