Did this video help you?
Oxidation & Reduction (Edexcel IGCSE Chemistry)
Revision Note
Oxidation & reduction
Oxidation & reduction in terms of oxygen
- The reactions of metals with oxygen, such as in iron rusting can be classified as oxidation
- Oxidation is any reaction in which a substance gains oxygen
- The opposite of oxidation is reduction
- Reduction is a reaction in which a substance loses oxygen
- For example, the displacement reaction between zinc and copper(II)oxide can be classified as a redox reaction
Zn + CuO → ZnO + Cu
zinc + copper(II) oxide → zinc oxide + copper
- Oxidation cannot occur without reduction happening simultaneously, hence these are called redox reactions
- The copper(II)oxide supplies the oxygen, so it is the oxidising agent
- The zinc is the reducing agent because it removes the oxygen
Oxidation & Reduction in terms of electrons
- Displacement reactions can be analysed in terms redox reactions by studying the transfer of electrons
- For the example of magnesium and copper sulfate, a balanced equation can be written in terms of the ions involved:
Mg (s) + Cu2+ (aq) + SO42- (aq) → Mg2+ (aq) + SO42- (aq) + Cu (s)
- The sulfate ions, SO42-, appear on both sides of the equation unchanged hence they are spectator ions and do not participate in the chemistry of the reaction so can be omitted:
Mg (s) + Cu2+ (aq) → Mg2+ (aq) + Cu (s)
- This equation is an example of a balanced ionic equation which can be further split into two half equations illustrating oxidation and reduction individually:
Mg → Mg2+ + 2e–
Cu2+ + 2e–→ Cu
- Mg is oxidised as it lose electrons
- Cu2+ is reduced as it gain electrons
- Oxidation is the loss of electrons
- Reduction is the gain of electrons
Oxidising agents in terms of electrons
- Oxidising agents will oxidise other species in a reaction
- They are themselves reduced therefore will gain electrons
- In the following example Fe has been oxidised and Cu2+ has been reduced
- Therefore Cu2+ is the oxidising agent
The redox reaction between Fe and Cu2+
The Fe atom is oxidised (loses electrons) and the Cu2+ ion is reduced (gains electrons). Cu2+ is the oxidising agent
Did this video help you?
'OIL RIG' is a useful mnemonic to help remember the definitions of oxidation and reduction
Worked example
Which change in the following equation is oxidation?
V3+ + Fe3+ → V4+ + Fe2+
Answer:
- Step 1 - Identify the changes for each species
- V3+ to V4+
- V3+ has lost 1 electron
- Fe3+ to Fe2+
- Fe3+ has gained 1 electron
- Step 2 - Identify each change as either oxidation and reduction
- V3+ to V4+ is oxidation
- Fe3+ to Fe2+ is reduction
- Therefore, V3+ has been oxidised
You've read 0 of your 10 free revision notes
Unlock more, it's free!
Did this page help you?