Title: Redox, Electrochemistry, and Radioactivity
1 Redox, Electrochemistry, and Radioactivity
2Redox
- A reduction is a gain of electrons, an oxidation
is a loss of electrons - A reduction is always conjoined with an oxidation
(electrons are neither created nor destroyed,
charges must balance) - Remember OILRIG
3OILRIG
- Oxidation is loss of electrons
- Reduction is gain of electrons
4OrLEO says GER
- Loss of electrons is oxidation
- Gain of electrons is reduction
5For example
- Cu2(aq)Fe(s)?Fe2(aq)Cu(s)
- (right?)
6For example
- Cu2(aq)Fe(s)?Fe2(aq)Cu(s)
- (right?)
- The iron loses custody of its electrons to form
the 2 ion. - The iron is oxidized to an iron (II) ion, the
copper ion is reduced to copper atom
7For example
8For example
- 2H2 O2?2H2O
- (right?)
- The hydrogen loses (partial) custody of its
electrons when it makes the polar covalent bond.
9For example
- 2H2 O2?2H2O
- (right?)
- The hydrogen loses custody of its electrons when
it makes the polar covalent bond. - The hydrogen is oxidized, the oxygen is reduced
10In general
- If an atom forms a (-) ion, it has been
reducedhappens to nonmetals - If an atom forms a () ion, it has been
oxidizedhappens to metals - Combining with O2 (or F2 or Cl2) is an
oxidationthe O2 (or F2 or Cl2) is reduced
11In general
- If an atom forms a (-) ion, it has been
reducedhappens to nonmetals - A (-) ion forming an element is an oxidation
- If an atom forms a () ion, it has been
oxidizedhappens to metals - A () ion forming an element is a reduction
- Combining with O2 (or F2 or Cl2) is an
oxidationthe O2 (or F2 or Cl2) is reduced
12Mark the oxidation and reduction
13Mark the oxidation and reduction
reduction
oxidation
14Mark the oxidation and reduction
reduction
oxidation
Hydrogen is the reducing agent
Oxygen is the oxidizing agent
15Mark the oxidation and reduction
reduction
oxidation
Hydrogen is the reducing agent
Oxygen is the oxidizing agent
(it gets reduced)
(it gets oxidized)
16Mark the oxidation and reduction (include the
agents and what happens to each)
- Cu2(aq)Fe(s)?Fe2(aq)Cu(s)
17Which gets oxidized? Which gets reduced?
- 6Li N2 ?2 Li3N
- O2 N2 ? 2 NO
- 16K S8 ? 8 K2S
- S8 16F2 ? 8 SF4
- Br2 2NaI ? I2 2 NaBr
- 2NaCl ? 2 Na Cl2
- H2 Cl2 ? 2 HCl
18Which gets oxidized? Which gets reduced?
- 6Li N2 ?2 Li3N
- O2 N2 ? 2 NO
- 16K S8 ? 8 K2S
- S8 16F2 ? 8 SF4
- Br2 2NaI ? I2 2 NaBr
- 2NaCl ? 2 Na Cl2
- H2 Cl2 ? 2 HCl
19Which gets oxidized? Which gets reduced?
- 6Li N2 ?2 Li3N
- O2 N2 ? 2 NO
- 16K S8 ? 8 K2S
- S8 16F2 ? 8 SF4
- Br2 2NaI ? I2 2 NaBr
- 2NaCl ? 2 Na Cl2
- H2 Cl2 ? 2 HCl
20What if its not so easy?
21Oxidation Numbers
- Summary of Oxidation State Rules
- Free element Oxidation State 0
- Compound total Oxidation State 0
- Ion Oxidation State its charge
- Oxygen Oxidation State -2
- (except peroxides -1 each)
- Hydrogen Oxidation State 1
- (except hydrides -1)
22What is the oxidation number?
- of each atom in sodium hypochlorite
- NaOCl
23What is the oxidation number?
Sodium hypochlorite is a compound, all together
oxidation numbers 0
24What is the oxidation number?
The Na ion has 1 charge Oxidation number 1
25What is the oxidation number?
The OCl- ion has -1 charge Oxidation numbers add
up to -1
26What is the oxidation number?
The O atom -2 charge Oxidation numbers add up to
-1
27What is the oxidation number?
So the Cl must be 1!
28What is the oxidation number?
NaCl KMnO4 diamond CO2 CO KCN Na4Fe(CN)
6 Fe2O3 Fe3O4 ClO4-
NH3 N2H4 NH4 Au NO3- NO2- NO2 NO
N2O Na2O2
ClO3- ClO2- ClO- Cl- Cl2 P2O5 P4O6
H3PO4 Mg3N2 MgH2
29Now, its easy
30Now, its easy
- -3 1 1 -2 1 -2 1
1 -1 1 -2 - 2NH3NaOCl?N2H4NaClH2O
31Now, its easy
reduction
- -3 1 1 -2 1 -2 1
1 -1 1 -2 - 2NH3NaOCl?N2H4NaClH2O
oxidation
32Does a redox reaction occur?
- Look for an oxidizing agent and a reducing agent.
- If there is one of each, then ask, Can this
oxidizing agent oxidize this reducing agent
Answer by comparing reduction potentials. (page
688) - (Dont memorize a rule, compare the values to a
reaction you know will occur)
33Does a redox reaction occur?
- If you combine
- Na and Fe3?
- Cl- and Ag?
- Cu and K ?
- Pb2 and I- ?
- Fe2 and Mg?
34Does a redox reaction occur?
- If you combine
- Na and Fe3?
- Cl- and Ag?
- Cu and K ?
- Pb2 and I- ?
- Fe2 and Mg?
Can be reduced, but not oxidized further
35Does a redox reaction occur?
- If you combine
- Na and Fe3?No. There is no reducer.
- Cl- and Ag?
- Cu and K ?
- Pb2 and I- ?
- Fe2 and Mg?
-
36Does a redox reaction occur?
- If you combine
- Na and Fe3?No. There is no reducer.
- Cl- and Ag?No. There is no oxidizer.
- Cu and K ?No. This oxidizer cant do it
- Pb2 and I- ?No, but it will precipitate.
- Fe2 and Mg?Yes.
- Fe2 Mg ? Fe and Mg2
37Redoxhalf reactions
- Balance the atoms
- Add H2O and H to balance oxygen and hydrogen
- Rectify the electrons, add and cancel
- Check that charges are balanced
- (Add OH- if the reaction is specified as in a
basic solution)
38Try it.
- S2O3-2 NO3- ?
- H2O2 Fe2 ?
- Cr2O7-2 I- ?
- MnO4- C2H5OH ?
39Try it.
- S2O3-2 NO3- ? SO4-2 NO
- H2O2 Fe2 ? H2O Fe3
- Cr2O7-2 I- ? Cr3 I2
- MnO4- C2H5OH ? Mn2 CO2 H2O
40Try it.
- 3x(S2O3-2 5H2O? 2 SO4-2 10H 8 e-)
- 8x(NO3- 4H 3 e- ? NO 2 H2O)
- 3S2O3-2 15H2O? 6 SO4-2 30H 24 e-)
- 8NO3- 32H 24 e- ? 8NO 16H2O)
- 3S2O3-28NO3-2H?6SO4-2 8NOH2O
41Reduction potentials
- -- Measured as compared to the reduction of 2H
2e- ? H2. (0.00V) - Half reactions that can accomplish this have (-)
reduction potentials - Half reactions that force the reverse have ()
reduction potentials
42Reduction potentials
- Specifically Magnesium reduces H
- 2H Mg ? Mg2 H2 which implies that
- Mg2 2 e- ? Mg
- has a Eolt0
- While bromine oxidizes hydrogen gas
- H2 Br2 ? 2H 2Br - which implies that
- Br2 2 e- ? 2Br
- has a Eogt0
43Electrochemical Cells
- When half reactions are separated, and the
electrons are connected in a circuit. - A salt bridge is needed to allow charges to
migrate to offset the motion of electrons - Cathodereduction
- An electrode carries electrons to or from a half
reaction
44Shorthand notation
- The Danielle Cell, using copper and zinc,
- ZnZn2Cu2Cu
- makes 1.1 V
45ZnZn2Cu2Cu
- (or, in general)
- product reactant
- Anode of of cathode
- oxidation reduction
46If non-metals are used
- PtH2H2OO2H2OPt
- The (non-reactive) metal electrode is noted
outside the bars
47Standard cell potentials
48Be able to
- Sketch a cell (include salt bridge and circuit)
- Label anode and cathode
- Write the half reactions, complete reaction
- Calculate Eo, show direction of electron flow
- Describe the oxidation and reductionwith mass
changes, observations. - Read and write the shorthand notation
49Electrolytic Cells
- Applying an external voltage will allow a
non-spontaneous reaction to occur. - 2H2O?2H2O2 is not spontaneous (Right?)
- If you apply a voltage to water (with some
electrolyte added to carry a charge), it will
decompose (or electrolyse)
50Nuclear Chemistry
- --breaks the rules that one atom cannot be
converted to another. - Chemistry is the dance of the electronsnuclear
reactions change the nuclei of atoms - --charge and mass are still conserved.
51Nuclide Notation
- A nuclide is a nucleus or atom of a specific
isotope of an element
K
39
19
- This is potassium-39. It has 19 protons (atomic
number 19), making it potassium, and 20
neutrons, making a mass number of 39
52How many p, n, e- in each?What is the mass
number and atomic number?
Cl-
36
I-
131
H
3
17
53
1
Sr2
90
Th
228
Fe3
59
38
90
26
53Natural decays
- athe loss of a particle from a nuclide
- --The a particle is composed of 2p and 2n, the
4He nucleus - --decreases the mass by 4 and the atomic number
by 2 - bemission of an electron (b particle) from the
nucleus by the conversion of a n ? p e- - --the electron is the b particle
- --increases the atomic number by 1, does not
affect mass
54Write the reaction
- Argon-39 undergoes a b decay
- Thorium-228 undergoes an a decay
- An a decay forms lead-204
- A b decay forms nitrogen-14
- A natural decay forms Sc-45 from Ca-45
- A natural decay forms Ac-227 from Pa-231
55Notice what they do
- A b decay lowers the n/p ratio in small nuclei,
or when the ratio is too large. - An a decay lowers the total size, and raises the
n/p in large nuclides, or when the ratio is too
small.
56What is too large or too small?
57What is too large or too small?
58What is too large or too small?
b decay
a decay
59What is too large or too small?
60What is too large or too small?
np 21
np 11
61This just in.
- Researchers report the first creation of the
long-lived nucleus hassium-270, a "doubly magic"
combination of 108 protons and 162 neutrons. Its
long lifetime of 22 seconds supports the theory
of an "island of stability" for the heaviest
elements. (J Dvorak et al. 2006 Phys. Rev. Lett.
97, 242501)
62Nuclear reactions
- Many nuclear reactions involve colliding nuclei
or smaller particles at some significant fraction
of the speed of light, - --find the missing particle by balancing mass and
charge.
63Particles might include
- p
- n
- e- (AKA b)
- d
- a
- g (OK, its not a particle, but its often
written in)
64In comparison
- Physical changes
- joules/mole range
- Chemical changes
- kilojoules/mole range
- Nuclear changes
- megajoules/mole range
65Fission vs Fusion
- Fissionbreaking up large nuclei
- --natural radioactive decay of large atoms
- --used for nuclear power
- Fusioncombining small nuclei
- --occurs naturally in stars
- --prospects for nuclear energyno radioactive
byproducts - Both are transmutationsone nuclide is converted
into another
66Consider the relationships
- Half life
- Original amount
- Final amount
- Time elapsed
67Consider the relationships
- AA0(1/2)
- A is the amount of the sample remaining
- A0 is the original amount in the sample
- t is the time that has passed, and
- t 1/2 is the half-life of the nuclide
t/t1/2
68Please notice
- AA0(1/2)
- A / A0 is the fraction remaining
- t / t 1/2 is the number of half-lifes that have
passed
t/t1/2
69Try it.
- Hydrogen-3 has a half life of 12.3 years. If you
start with a 20 g sample of H-3 - --how much is left after 12.3 years?
- --how much is left after 24.6 years?
- --how much is left after 30.2 years?
70Try it.
- Br-82 has a half life of 35.3 hours. If you
start with a 6.5 mg sample of Br-82 - --how much is left after 4 days?
- --how long will it take to reach .75 mg?
71Try it.
- Br-82 has a half life of 35.3 hours. If you
start with a 6.5 mg sample of Br-82 - --how much is left after 4 days?
- --how long will it take to reach .75 mg?
How do you solve for an exponent?
72Use a log function
- log (A/A0) log(1/2)
- log (A/A0) log(1/2)
- log (A/A0)
- log(1/2)
t/t1/2
t/t1/2
t/t1/2
73Try it.
- Br-82 has a half life of 35.3 hours. If you
start with a 6.5 mg sample of Br-82 - --how much is left after 4 days?
- --how long will it take to reach .75 mg?
74Try it.
- If you start with 1.38 mg of U-234 and t1/22.44
x 105 yrs for its decay - --how much is left after 20,000 years?
- --how long will it take to reach 0.40 mg?
75Try it.
- A .350 mg sample of K-42 decays to only .066 mg
in 29.7 hours. - --what is the half life?
- --how much was left after 20.0 hours?
- --how long will it take to reach .010 mg?
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82Th-th-thats all, folks.
83Atomic theory
- All matter is composed of atoms.
- --atoms of one element are identical
- --atoms of different elements are different
- --reactions form different combinations of
atoms, not different atoms - Atoms are composed of protons, neutrons, and
electrons.
84- (Are all of the little kids in bed?Now we can
tell you the real story)
85Modern Theory
In this Universe, you will find
Bosons (force mediating particles)
Fermions
and
86Modern Theory
Bosons (force mediating particles) include
g, (electromagnetic force) Zo, (weak nuclear
force) Gluons (Strong nuclear force) Graviton
(gravity) W, (weak nuclear force) Higgs
(mediates mass)
87Modern Theory
Fermions are the fundamental particles, including
Quarks
and
Leptons
88Modern Theory
top (formerly known as truth)
up
Types of quarks include
down
charm
bottom (formerly known as beauty)
strange
(and their antiparticles)
89Modern Theory
Leptons include
Electrons, e-, Muons, m, Tauons, t, and three
types of neutrinos ?e, ?m, ?t
(and their antiparticles)
90Modern Theory
Combinations of quarks make hadrons, either
Mesons (2 quarks each) Including p, K-, r,
B0, ?c
Baryons (3 quarks each) including p, n, p-, L,
?-
91Modern Theory
In this Universe, you will find
Bosons (force mediating particles) g,
(electromagnetic force Zo, (weak nuclear
force) Gluons (Str. nuclear force) Graviton
(gravity) W,(weak nuclear force) Higgs
(mediates mass)
fermions which include the fundamental particles
and
Quarks u,d,c,s,t,b (and anti-particles) Quarks
make up the hadrons, either
Leptons e-,m,t,?e, ?m, ?t (and antiparticles)
Mesons (2 quarks each) p,K-,r,B0,?c
baryons (3 quarks each) including p,n,p-,L,?-