Oxidation & Reduction (Edexcel IGCSE Chemistry (Modular))
Revision Note
Written by: Stewart Hird
Reviewed by: Lucy Kirkham
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
'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
Last updated:
You've read 0 of your 5 free revision notes this week
Sign up now. It’s free!
Did this page help you?