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Question
Discuss the trends in chemical reactivity of group 15 elements.
Very Long Answer
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Solution 1
- Reactivity towards hydrogen: The elements of group 15 react with hydrogen to form hydrides of type EH3, where E = N, P, As, Sb, or Bi. The stability of hydrides decreases on moving down from NH3 to BiH3.
- Reactivity towards oxygen: The elements of group 15 form two types of oxides, E2O3 and E2O5, where E = N, P, As, Sb, or Bi. The oxide with the element in the higher oxidation state is more acidic than the other. However, the acidic character decreases on moving down a group.
- Reactivity towards halogens: The group 15 elements react with halogens to form two series of salts: EX3 and EX5. However, nitrogen does not form NX5 as it lacks the d-orbital. All trihalides (except NX3) are stable.
- Reactivity towards metals: The group 15 elements react with metals to form binary compounds in which metals exhibit −3 oxidation states.
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Solution 2
- Nitrogen is less reactive than other group 15 elements due to the very high bond dissociation enthalpy (941.4 kJ/mol) of the N≡N triple bond.
- Phosphorus and other heavier elements have weaker single bonds, so they are more reactive.
- Reactivity increases down the group as atomic size increases and ionisation enthalpy decreases.
- Nitrogen tends to form N3− ions due to its small size and high electronegativity, while heavier elements are less likely to form such negative ions.
- The stability of +3 oxidation state increases down the group due to the inert pair effect, while +5 oxidation state stability decreases.
- Group 15 elements form covalent compounds by sharing their three unpaired p-electrons.
- Overall, reactivity trends depend on atomic size, bond strength, and oxidation state preferences of the elements.
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