Title: AP Net Ionic Equations
1AP Net Ionic Equations
2- AP equations are found in the free response
section of the AP test. You will have 3
equations following by a question about the
reaction. The equations are of mixed types.
3- The sections is worth 15 points and is 10 of the
free response grade. Free response is 50 of the
total AP test grade.
4- All AP equations work. In each case, a
reaction will occur. These equations need to be
written in net ionic form. All spectator ions
must be left out and all ions must be written in
ionic form.
5- Answer 3 equations that must be balanced.
- Each equation is followed by a question.
- 1 pt for reactants, 2 points for products, and 1
pt for each question.
6- Strong Acids are
- Exception concentrated sulfuric acid-keep
together because it really is 97 H2SO4 and 3
water in the jug. - Strong Bases are
7- Weak acids and bases keep together
8- All molecular substances and nonsoluble compounds
must be written together (not ionized!).
9Know your solubility rules!!!
- Ca(OH)2 and Sr(OH) 2 are moderately soluble and
can be written together or as ions. - Ba(OH)2 is soluble and Mg(OH)2 is insoluble.
- CaSO4 and SrSO4 are moderately soluble and can be
written together or as ions. - Weak electrolytes, such as acetic acid, are not
ionized. - Solids and pure liquids are written together,
also. - A saturated solution is written in ionic form
while a suspension is written together.
10Double Replacement
- Two compounds react to form two new compounds.
No changes in oxidation numbers occur. All
double replacement reactions must have a driving
force that removes a pair of ions from solution.
11- Manganese(II) nitrate solution is mixed with a
sodium hydroxide solution
12- Excess hydrochloric acid is added to an aqueous
solution of potassium sulfite
13- Hydrogen sulfide gas is bubbled through a
solution of lead(II) nitrate
14- A solution of ammonium sulfate is added to a
potassium hydroxide solution
15- Solutions of tripotassium phosphate and zinc
nitrate are mixed
16- Gaseous hydrofluoric acid reacts with solid
silicon dioxide.
17Single Replacement Rxns
- Treat like redox reactions.
- Reaction where one element displaces another in a
compound. One element is oxidized and another is
reduced. - A BC ? B AC
- charges replace and
- charges replace -
18- Active metals replace less active metals or
hydrogen from their compounds in aqueous
solution.
19- Active nonmetals replace less active nonmetals
from their compounds in aqueous solution. Each
halogen will displace less electronegative
(heavier) halogens from their binary salts.
20Examples
- A piece of aluminum metal is added to a solution
of silver nitrate
21- Small chunks of solid sodium are added to water
22- Chlorine gas is bubbled into a solution of sodium
bromide
23- Magnesium turnings are added to a solution of
iron(III) chloride
24Anhydrides
- Anhydride means without water.
- Water is a reactant in each of these equations.
25Memorize the Rules
- Look for
- 1. Oxides H2O
- a. metallic oxide H2O ? base
- b. nonmetallic oxide H2O ? acid
26- 2. Metal hydride H2O? metal hydroxide H2
27- 3. Group 1 and 2 nitride H2O?
- metal hydroxide NH3
28- 4. Phosphorus halide H2O ?
- H3PO4 or H3PO3 H(halide) acid
29Examples
- Excess water is added to solid calcium hydride
30- Solid lithium hydride is added to water
31- Solid dinitrogen pentoxide is added to water
32- Solid potassium oxide is added to water
33- Phosphorus pentachloride solid is added to water
34- Methylamine gas is bubbled into distilled water
35Oxidation-Reduction Reactions
- Redox reactions involve the transfer of
electrons. The oxidation numbers of at least two
elements must change. - Single replacement, some combination and some
decomposition reactions are redox reactions.
36- To predict the products of a redox reaction, look
at the reagents given to see if there is both an
oxidizing agent and a reducing agent. - When a problem mentions an acidic or basic
solution, it is probably redox.
37Common oxidizing agent Product formed
MnO4- in acidic solution Mn2
MnO2 in acidic solution Mn2
MnO4- in neutral or basic solution MnO2 (s)
Cr2O72- in acidic solution Cr3
HNO3, concentrated NO2
HNO3, dilute NO
H2SO4, hot, concentrated SO2
38Common oxidizing agent Product formed
Metal-ic ions Metal-ous ions
Free halogens Halide ions
Na2O2 NaOH
HClO4 Cl-
H2O2 H2O
39Common reducing agent Product formed
Halide ions Free halogen
Free metals Metal ions
Sulfite ions or SO2 Sulfate ions
Nitrite ions Nitrate ions
40Common reducing agent Product formed
Free halogens, dilute basic solution Hypohalite ions
Free halogens, conc. basic solution Halate ions
Metal-ous ions Metal-ic ions
H2O2 O2
C2O42- CO2
41Examples
- A solution of tin(II) chloride is added to an
acidified solution of potassium permanganate.
42- Hydrogen peroxide solution is added to a solution
of iron(II) sulfate
43- Potassium permanganate solution is added to a
solution of oxalic acid acidified with a few
drops of sulfuric acid.
44- A piece of iron is added to a solution of
iron(III) sulfate.
45- Solid sodium dichromate is added to an acidified
solution of sodium iodide
46- Potassium permanganate is mixed with an alkaline
solution of sodium sulfite
47- Copper (II) sulfide is oxidized by dilute nitric
acid.
48- A solution of potassium iodide is added to an
acidified solution of potassium dichromate.
49Acid-Base Neutralization Rxns
- Acids react with bases to produce water and
salts.
50Examples
- Hydrogen sulfide gas is bubbled through a
solution of potassium hydroxide
51- A solution of sodium hydroxide is added to a
solution of sodium dihydrogen phosphate until the
same number of moles of each compound has been
added
52- Nitric acid is added to crystals of pure calcium
oxide
53- Carbon dioxide is bubbled through a solution of
sodium hydroxide
54Decomposition Reactions
- Reaction where a compound breaks down into two or
more elements or compounds. Heat, electrolysis,
or a catalyst is usually necessary.
55- Memorize the rules!
- 1. Metal Carbonate ? Metal oxide CO2
- 2. Metal Chlorate ? Metal chloride O2
56- 3. Hydrogen peroxide? water oxygen
- 4. Ammonium carbonate? ammonia water
carbon dioxide - 5. Sulfurous acid ? Sulfur dioxide water
- 6. Carbonic acid ? carbon dioxide water
57Examples
- A solution of hydrogen peroxide is heated
58- Magnesium carbonate is heated
59- Potassium chlorate is heated in the presence of
manganese dioxide
60- Solid ammonium carbonate is heated
61Addition Reactions
- Two or more elements or compounds combine to form
a single product.
62Memorize the rules! Most of these should already
look familiar.
- 1. 2 cmpds ? form one compound
- 2. If excess use the higher oxidation number
- If limited use the lower oxidation number
63- 3. Nonmetal oxide water ? acid
- 4. Metal oxide water ? base
- 5. Metal oxide sulfur dioxide ?Metal sulfite
- 6. Metal oxide carbon dioxide ? metal
carbonate
64Examples
- Magnesium oxide is added to a container of carbon
dioxide gas
65- Solid calcium oxide is heated in the presence of
sulfur trioxide gas
66- Calcium metal is heated strongly in nitrogen gas
67- The gases boron trifluoride and ammonia are mixed
68Combustion Reactions
- -Elements or compounds combine with oxygen.
69Memorize these rules.
- Hydrocarbon oxygen ? carbon dioxide
water - 2. ammonia oxygen ? NO H2O
- if excess O2 ? NO2 H2O
70- 3. Nonmetal hydride oxygen ? nonmetal
oxide water - 4. Nonmetal sulfideoxygen ? nonmetal
oxide sulfur dioxide
71- Methane is burned in the presence of oxygen
72- Lithium metal is burned in air
73- Solid zinc sulfide is heated in an excess of
oxygen
74- A piece of solid bismuth is heated strongly in
oxygen
75Complex Ion Reactions
- Complex ions are made up of a ____________ and a
_____________. - Co(NH3)63 is the complex ion
- NH3 is the ligand, Co is the metal
76- Possible metals Cu/Zn/Ag/Cd/Fe/Al
- Possible ligands NH3, OH-1, SCN-1
- Magic number? Double charge to get magic number
- Exceptions to the trick
- Al(OH)4- Fe(SCN)2
77- Example
- Co(NH3)6 Cl3
- NH3 is the ligand, Co(NH3)63 is the complex ion
78Common complex ions on AP equations
- Al(OH)4- tetrahydroxoaluminate ion
- formed from (Al or Al(OH)3 or Al3 OH-)
- Ag(NH3)2 diamminesilver(I) ion
- formed from (Ag NH3)
79- Zn(OH)42- tetrahydroxyzincate ion
- formed from (Zn(OH)2 OH-)
- Zn(NH3)42 tetramminezinc ion
- formed from (Zn2 NH3)
- Cu(NH3)42 tetraminecopper(II) ion
- formed from (Cu2 NH3)
80- Cd(NH3)42 tetraminecadmium(II) ion
- formed from (Cd2 NH3)
- Fe(SCN)2 thiocyanairon(III) ion
- formed from (Fe3 SCN-)
- Ag(CN)2- dicyanoargentate(I) ion
- formed from (Ag and CN-)
81- Remember the following when writing complex ion
reactions - Acid to complex ion ? break it up
- 2. Acid to NH3 complex ? NH4 breakup
complex ion - 3. HCl Ag complex ? AgCl Breakup
complex ion
82Examples
- Concentrated (15M) ammonia is added in excess to
a solution of copper (II) nitrate
83- Dilute hydrochloric acid is added to a solution
of tetraminecopper (II) sulfate
84- A suspension of zinc hydroxide is treated with
concentrated sodium hydroxide solution
85- Solid silver chloride is added to a concentrated
solution of ammonia
86- Hydrochloric acid is added to a solution of
dihydroxysilver bromide