Relative Ease of Oxidation & Reduction (DP IB Chemistry)
Revision Note
Relative Ease of Oxidation & Reduction
Depending on the position in a group, a metal (in Group 1 or Group 2) will be more or less likely to be oxidised
When lithium reacts with water hydrogen gas and lithium hydroxide are formed
2Li (s) + 2H2O (l) → 2LiOH (aq) + H2 (g)
Lithium is oxidised from Li to Li+
The oxidation number changes from 0 to +1
This reaction is vigorous, though down Group 1 the reaction becomes even more vigorous and violent
Therefore down the group, the relative ease of oxidation increases
The same pattern also occurs in Group 2
For example, magnesium reacts very slowly with water and calcium reacts much more quickly
Mg (s) + 2H2O (l) → Mg(OH)2 (s) + H2 (g) = very slow reaction
Ca (s) + 2H2O (l) → Ca(OH)2 (s) + H2 (g) = very quick reaction
Reduction of Halogens
Oxidising power of the Group 17 elements
Halogens react with metals by accepting an electron from the metal atom to become an ion with 1- charge
Ca (s) + Cl2 (g) → Ca2+(Cl-)2 (s)
Halogens are therefore oxidising agents:
Halogens oxidise the metal by removing an electron from the metal (the oxidation number of the metal increases)
Halogens become reduced as they gain an extra electron from the metal atom (the oxidation number of the halogen decreases)
The oxidising power of the halogens decreases going down the group (the halogens get less reactive)
The relative oxidising power of the halogens
F2 | strongest oxidising agent |
---|---|
Cl2 | |
Br2 | |
I2 | weakest oxidising agent |
Reaction of the halogens with halide ions in displacement reactions
A halogen displacement occurs when a more reactive halogen displaces a less reactive halogen from an aqueous solution of its halide
The reactivity of Group 17 non-metals increases as you move up the group
Out of the 3 halogens, chlorine, bromine and iodine, chlorine is the most reactive and iodine is the least reactive
Aqueous Solution Colour of Halogens
Aqueous solution | Colour |
---|---|
Chlorine | Very pale green, but usually appears colourless as it is very dilute |
Bromine | Orange but will turn yellow when very dilute |
Iodine | Brown |
Halogen displacement reactions
Chlorine and bromine
If you add chlorine solution to colourless potassium bromide solution, the solution becomes orange as bromine is formed
Chlorine is above bromine in Group 17 so it is more reactive
Chlorine will therefore displace bromine from an aqueous solution of a metal bromide
2KBr (aq) + Cl2 (aq) → 2KCl (aq) + Br2 (aq)
potassium bromide + chlorine → potassium chloride + bromine
Bromine and iodine
Bromine is above iodine in Group 17 so it is more reactive
Bromine will therefore displace iodine from an aqueous solution of a metal iodide
Br2 (l) + 2NaI (aq) → 2NaBr (aq) + I2 (aq)
bromine + sodium Iodide → sodium bromide + iodine
Worked Example
Which of the statements below are correct?
I. Potassium chloride solution will react with fluorine to form chlorine.
II. Sodium chloride solution will react with iodine to form chlorine.
III. Lithium iodide solution will react with bromine to form iodine.
A. I and II only
B. I and III only
C. II and III only
D. I, II and III
Answer:
The correct option is B.
Fluorine will displace chlorine as it is higher up in the group
Bromine will displace iodine for the same reason.
Iodine is below chlorine so cannot displace chlorine from sodium chloride
Metal & Metal Ion Reactions
Metals can be ranked in order of reactivity
This is called the reactivity series or just activity series
Metals higher in reactivity can displace less reactive metals from their compounds in solutions or from their oxides
An example of a metal displacement reaction occurs between magnesium and aqueous copper (II) sulfate solution
Mg (s) + CuSO4 (aq) → MgSO4 (aq) + Cu (s)
What are the redox processes going on here?
If we split the equation into half equations it’s easy to see which species is oxidised and which is reduced:
Mg → Mg2++ 2e- Loss of electrons = oxidation
Cu2+ + 2e- → Cu Gain of electrons = reduction
The more reactive metal acts as a reducing agent
This allows metals to be ranked from most reactive (strongest reducing agents) to least reactive:
The metal activity series
The more reactive a metal is the better it is at pushing electrons onto less reactive metal ions. Magnesium is better at pushing electrons onto copper(II) ions than copper is at pushing electrons onto magnesium ions
Worked Example
What is the order of decreasing reactivity of the metals (most reactive first)?
Zn (s) + Sn2+ (aq) → Zn2+ (aq) + Sn (s)
Cu (s) + Zn2+ (aq) → No Reaction
Sn (s) + Cu2+ (aq) → Sn2+ (aq) + Cu (s)
Ag (s) + Cu2+ (aq) → No Reaction
A. Zn > Cu > Sn > Ag
B. Sn > Zn > Ag > Cu
C. Ag > Cu > Zn > Sn
D. Zn > Sn > Cu > Ag
Answer:
The correct option is D.
The first reaction tells you that zinc is more reactive than tin (Zn > Sn):
Zn (s) + Sn2+ (aq) → Zn2+ (aq) + Sn (s)
The second reaction tells you that zinc is more reactive than copper (Zn > Cu):
Cu (s) + Zn2+ (aq) → No Reaction
The third reaction tells you that tin is more reactive than copper (Sn > Cu):
Sn (s) + Cu2+ (aq) → Sn2+ (aq) + Cu (s)
The fourth reaction tells you that copper is more reactive than silver (Cu > Ag):
Ag (s) + Cu2+ (aq) → No Reaction
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