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Revision: Redox Reactions Chemistry Science (English Medium) Class 11 CBSE

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Definitions [5]

Definition: Oxidation

"Oxidation" is defined as the addition of oxygen/electronegative element to a substance or the removal of hydrogen/ Electron/ electropositive element from a substance.

or

A process involving an increase in oxidation number by the loss of electrons.

Definition: Reduction

"Reduction" is defined as the removal of oxygen/ electronegative element from a substance or the addition of hydrogen/Electron/ electropositive element to a substance.

or

A process involving decrease in oxidation number by gain of electrons.

Definition: Oxidising Agent

The species which gets itself reduced and oxidise another species is called oxidising agent.

or

A substance which involves a decrease in the oxidation number of one or more of its elements. An oxidising agent helps oxidise the other substance by being reduced itself.

\[\begin{aligned} & \mathrm{S}+6\mathrm{HNO}_{3}\longrightarrow\mathrm{H}_{2}\mathrm{SO}_{4}+2\mathrm{H}_{2}\mathrm{O}+6\mathrm{NO}_{2} \\ & \mathrm{Oxidising} \\ & \mathrm{agent} \end{aligned}\]

Definition: Reducing Agent

The species which gets itself oxidised and reduce another species is called reducing agent.

or

A substance which involves an increase in the oxidation number of one or more of its elements. A reducing agent helps reduce the other substance by being oxidised.

\[\begin{aligned} & \mathrm{ZnO}+\mathrm{C}\longrightarrow\mathrm{Zn}+\mathrm{CO} \\ & \mathrm{Reducing} \\ & \mathrm{agent} \end{aligned}\]

Definition: Oxidation Number

Oxidation number (also called oxidation state) is the charge that an atom of an element appears to have when present in a combined state with other atoms. It is a hypothetical charge assigned by assuming all bonds are ionic — atoms in real molecules like H₂O do not actually carry these charges.

Key Points

Key Points: Oxidation Number

Rules for Assigning Oxidation Numbers:

Species Rule
Free elements Oxidation number = 0 (e.g., Na, O₂, O₃, Hg, S₈, P₄)
Monoatomic ions Oxidation number = charge on the ion (e.g., Mn²⁺ = +2, Cr³⁺ = +3)
Fluorine Always −1 in all compounds
Oxygen Usually −2; Exceptions: −1 in peroxides (H₂O₂), −1/2 in superoxides (KO₂), +2 in oxygen fluoride (OF₂)
Hydrogen Usually +1; Exception: −1 in metal hydrides (e.g., CaH₂, NaH)
Halogens (Cl, Br, I) Usually −1 in binary compounds; can be positive when bonded to a more electronegative element or oxygen
Neutral compound Sum of all oxidation numbers = 0
Polyatomic ion Sum of all oxidation numbers = charge on the ion
  • Oxidation number of N can be −3 (bonded to less electronegative atoms) or +3 (bonded to more electronegative atoms)
  • Oxidation number of halogens is always −1 in metal halides
  • In interhalogen compounds, the more electronegative halogen gets the oxidation number of −1
  • Oxidation number of metals in amalgams and carbonyls is zero (e.g., Fe in [Fe(CO)₅] = 0)
  • In complex ions, the algebraic sum of oxidation numbers of all atoms = net charge on the ion
  • Oxidation number can be positive, negative, zero, a whole number, or a fraction
  • Oxidation number greater than +6 or less than −4 is unusual — double-check for errors

Stock Notation

Variable oxidation states are indicated using Roman numerals in parentheses after the element symbol:

Formula Name Stock Notation
Cu₂O Cuprous oxide Copper (I) oxide
Fe₂O₃ Ferric oxide Iron (III) oxide
HgCl₂ Mercuric chloride Mercury (II) chloride
SnCl₂ Stannous chloride Tin (II) chloride
Key Points: Types of Redox Reactions
Type Core Idea General Form Key Feature Example
Combination Reaction Two or more reactants combine to form one product A + B → AB Single product formed C + O₂ → CO₂
Decomposition Reaction One compound breaks into simpler substances AB → A + B Reverse of combination 2NaH → 2Na + H₂
Displacement Reaction More reactive element displaces less reactive element X + YZ → XZ + Y Based on reactivity series Zn + CuSO₄ → ZnSO₄ + Cu
a) Metal Displacement Metal replaces another metal in compound M₁ + M₂X → M₁X + M₂ More reactive metal displaces less reactive Zn + CuSO₄ → ZnSO₄ + Cu
b) Non-metal Displacement Non-metal replaces another non-metal X₂ + 2Y⁻ → 2X⁻ + Y₂ Less common, includes H displacement 2Na + 2H₂O → 2NaOH + H₂
Disproportionation Reaction Same element is oxidized and reduced A → A⁺ + A⁻ One element, two oxidation states 2H₂O₂ → 2H₂O + O₂
Key Points: Balancing of Redox Reactions

Two methods are used to balance redox reactions:

Method 1: Oxidation Number Method

The change in oxidation number is used to balance electron gain and loss.

Steps (Acidic Medium):

  1. Write the skeleton equation; balance all atoms except O and H first
  2. Identify which atoms change oxidation number; calculate the net increase and decrease
  3. Multiply coefficients to make total increase in oxidation number = total decrease
  4. Balance O atoms by adding H₂O to the side with fewer O atoms
  5. Balance H atoms by adding H⁺ ions
  6. Check that all atoms and charges are balanced

Method 2: Ion Electron Method (Half-Reaction Method)

The reaction is split into two half-reactions (oxidation and reduction) which are balanced separately and then combined.

Steps:

  1. Write the redox reaction in ionic form
  2. Split into oxidation half-reaction and reduction half-reaction
  3. Balance atoms in each half-reaction (except O and H first)
  4. Balance O by adding H₂O; balance H by adding H⁺ (acidic) or OH⁻ (basic)
  5. Balance charge by adding electrons to the appropriate side
  6. Equalise electrons transferred — multiply one or both half-reactions by suitable factors so electrons cancel
  7. Add both half-reactions; cancel identical species on both sides
  8. Check that all atoms and charges are balanced

For Basic Medium (Ion Electron Method):
After balancing in acidic conditions:

  • Add OH⁻ ions to both sides equal to the number of H⁺ ions
  • H⁺ + OH⁻ → H₂O (combine)
  • Eliminate H₂O molecules appearing on both sides
  • Final check: all elements and charges must balance
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