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Revision: Std. XI >> Redox Reactions MAH-MHT CET (PCM/PCB) Redox Reactions

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Definitions [2]

Definition: Redox Reactions

Any reaction that involves both oxidation and reduction occurring simultaneously is called an oxidation-reduction reaction or simply a redox reaction.

or

The chemical reaction in which both oxidation and reduction occur simultaneously is called a redox reaction.

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: Redox Reactions

Redox Reactions:

  • A substance that oxidises another substance (and is itself reduced) is called an oxidising agent.
  • A substance that reduces another substance (and is itself oxidised) is called a reducing agent.

What is Oxidation and Reduction?

Perspective Oxidation Reduction
In terms of oxygen Gain of one or more O atoms Loss of one or more O atoms
In terms of hydrogen Loss of hydrogen Gain of hydrogen
In terms of electropositive element Loss of electropositive element Gain of electropositive element
In terms of electronegative element Gain of electronegative element Loss of electronegative element
In terms of electrons Loss of electrons Gain of electrons
In terms of oxidation number Increase in oxidation number Decrease in oxidation number

Redox in Terms of Electron Transfer:

A reaction in which electrons are lost by one substance and gained by another is called a redox reaction.

  • Oxidising agent = electron acceptor
  • Reducing agent = electron donor

Example:

\[\mathrm{Hg}_2^{2+}+\mathrm{Sn}^{2+}\to\mathrm{Hg}+\mathrm{Sn}^{4+}\]

(Hg₂²⁺ gains electrons → reduced; Sn²⁺ loses electrons → oxidised)

Key Points: Types of Redox Reactions
  1. Combination reaction — Two atoms or molecules combine to form a product
  2. Decomposition reaction — A compound breaks down into simpler substances
  3. Displacement reaction — An atom or ion displaces another atom or ion from a compound
  4. Disproportionation reaction — A single substance undergoes both oxidation and reduction simultaneously
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: 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
Key Points: Redox Reaction and Electrode Potential

Electrochemical Cell:

An electrochemical cell converts chemical energy (from a redox reaction) into electrical energy. The classic example is the Daniell cell (Zn–Cu cell).

Key terms:

Term Description
Flow of electrons Electrons travel through the external circuit from anode (−) to cathode (+)
Flow of current Conventional current flows from cathode to anode (opposite to electron flow)
Electrode potential The electrical potential developed at an electrode when it is in contact with its ion solution
Electrode reaction The half-reaction (oxidation or reduction) that takes place at an electrode
Redox couple The two chemical species (oxidised and reduced forms) linked by electron transfer, forming a half-cell
  • A large negative value of E° means the redox couple is a strong reducing agent (readily loses electrons)
  • Fluorine has the highest positive E° value — it has the greatest tendency to gain electrons (strongest oxidising agent)
  • A strong oxidising agent and a strong reducing agent should never be stored together — they can react violently
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