Group VII Displacement Reactions (Cambridge (CIE) IGCSE Chemistry)

Revision Note

Alexandra Brennan

Written by: Alexandra Brennan

Reviewed by: Stewart Hird

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Group VII displacement reactions

  • A halogen displacement reaction occurs when a more reactive halogen displaces a less reactive halogen from an aqueous solution of its halide

  • The reactivity of Group 7 non-metals increases as you move up the group

  • Out of the three commonly used halogens, chlorine, bromine and iodine, chlorine is the most reactive and iodine is the least reactive

Colour of halogens in aqueous solutions

Aqueous solution

Colour

Chlorine

Very pale green but usually appears colourless as it is very dilute 

Bromine

Orange but will turn yellow when diluted 

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 7 so is more reactive

  • Chlorine will therefore displace bromine from an aqueous solution of the metal bromide

  • The least reactive halogen always ends up in the elemental form

potassium bromide + chlorine  →  potassium chloride + bromine

2KBr (aq) + Cl2 (aq) → 2KCl (aq) + Br2 (aq)

Bromine and iodine

  • Bromine is above iodine in Group 7 so is more reactive

  • Bromine will therefore displace iodine from an aqueous solution of metal iodide

  • The solution will turn brown as iodine is formed

magnesium iodide + bromine  →  magnesium bromide + iodine

 MgI2 (aq) + Br2 (aq)  → MgBr2 (aq) + I2 (aq)

Summary table of displacement reactions 

 

Chlorine (Cl2)

Bromine (Br2)

Iodine (I2)

Potassium chloride

(KCl)

x

No reaction

No reaction

Potassium bromide

(KBr)

Chlorine displaces the bromide ions

Yellow-orange colour of bromine seen 

x

No reaction

Potassium Iodide 

(KI)

Chlorine displaces the iodide ions

Brown colour of iodine is seen

Bromine displaces the iodide ions

Brown colour of iodine is seen

x

Examiner Tips and Tricks

Iodine solid, solution and vapour are different colours. Solid iodine is dark grey-black, iodine vapour is purple and aqueous iodine is brown.

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Alexandra Brennan

Author: Alexandra Brennan

Expertise: Chemistry

Alex studied Biochemistry at Newcastle University before embarking upon a career in teaching. With nearly 10 years of teaching experience, Alex has had several roles including Chemistry/Science Teacher, Head of Science and Examiner for AQA and Edexcel. Alex’s passion for creating engaging content that enables students to succeed in exams drove her to pursue a career outside of the classroom at SME.

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.