Extraction of Metals & Reduction (AQA GCSE Chemistry)

Revision Note

Stewart Hird

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Extraction of metals & reduction

  • The Earth’s crust contains metals and metal compounds such as gold, copper, iron oxide and aluminium oxide

  • Useful metals are often chemically combined with other substances forming ores

    • A metal ore is a rock that contains enough of the metal to make it worthwhile extracting

  • They have to be extracted from their ores through processes such as electrolysis, using a blast furnace or by reacting with more reactive material

  • In many cases, the ore is an oxide of the metal

    • Therefore, the extraction of these metals is a reduction process since oxygen is being removed

  • Common examples of oxide ores are iron and aluminium ores which are called haematite and bauxite respectively

  • Unreactive metals do not have to be extracted chemically as they are often found as the uncombined element

  • This occurs as they do not easily react with other substances due to their chemical stability

  • They are known as native metals and examples include gold and platinum which can both be mined directly from the Earth’s crust

Examiner Tips and Tricks

A metal can reduce another metal (remove oxygen) only if it is more reactive than the metal that is bonded to the oxygen.

Extraction of metals and the reactivity series

  • The most reactive metals are at the top of the series

  • The tendency to become oxidised is thus linked to how reactive a metal is and therefore its position on the reactivity series

  • Metals higher up are therefore less resistant to oxidation than the metals placed lower down which are more resistant to oxidation

  • The position of the metal on the reactivity series determines the method of extraction

  • Higher placed metals (above carbon) have to be extracted from their compounds using electrolysis as they are too reactive and cannot be reduced by carbon

Which element is used for extracting metals from their compounds by reduction?

  • Lower placed metals can be extracted from their compounds by heating with carbon which reduces them

    • E.g. The oxides of metals which are below carbon can be reduced by heating them with carbon 

      • The carbon removes the oxygen from the metal oxide

      • Carbon dioxide is formed as well as the metal element:

metal oxide + carbon   →   metal   +   carbon dioxide

Metals extraction method table

Metal

Extraction method

Most reactive

Potassium

Extracted by electrolysis of the molten chloride or oxide

Large amounts of electricity are required, which makes this an expensive process

Sodium

Lithium

Calcium

Magnesium

Aluminium

Zinc

Extracted by heating with a reducing agent such as carbon or carbon monoxide in a blast furnace

A cheap process as carbon is cheap and can also be a source of heat

Iron

Copper

Silver 

Found as pure elements

Gold

Least reactive

The extraction method depends on the position of a metal in the reactivity series

Examiner Tips and Tricks

Make sure you can explain why aluminium is extracted by electrolysis while iron is extracted by reduction as it is a question that often comes up.


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Stewart Hird

Author: Stewart Hird

Expertise: Chemistry Lead

Stewart has been an enthusiastic GCSE, IGCSE, A Level and IB teacher for more than 30 years in the UK as well as overseas, and has also been an examiner for IB and A Level. As a long-standing Head of Science, Stewart brings a wealth of experience to creating Topic Questions and revision materials for Save My Exams. Stewart specialises in Chemistry, but has also taught Physics and Environmental Systems and Societies.