Ashendale
Harmless
Posts: 47
Registered: 3-4-2005
Location: Estonia
Member Is Offline
Mood: Hydrated
|
|
Help with reducer, oxidizer, redox reaction..
I need help. I have a problem with identifying oxidizer or reducer quickly. Sure I can do it like so: "Hmm, okay, so umm, copper went from +1 to
+2...so it gave one electron, okay, reducer is a thing that gives electron, so copper reduced..."
But that takes me hell of a time. I took the old book, but I still can't get it clear. Is there a way to remember, which is reducer, which is oxidizer
and which reduces and which oxidizes?
I just keep mixing them up and I would really like to get it right..
Thanks in advance.
|
|
Odyssèus
Hazard to Self
Posts: 50
Registered: 7-3-2006
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Oxidising agents get reduced and recieves/accepts electrons. Reducing agents get oxidised and donates/loses electrons.
The way I remember it is that an oxidising agent for example, doesnt oxidise itself but something else, so it gets reduced. As for which one gains and
which one loses electrons... reducing agents reduce the number of electrons the agent has.
|
|
Darkblade48
Hazard to Others
Posts: 411
Registered: 27-3-2005
Location: Canada
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Quote: | Originally posted by Ashendale
But that takes me hell of a time. I took the old book, but I still can't get it clear. Is there a way to remember, which is reducer, which is oxidizer
and which reduces and which oxidizes?
|
I don't suppose memorizing a table of reduction potentials is what you had in mind? I think this is the only way to do it (or with enough practice,
you'll have a feel for what will reduce what)
|
|
Ashendale
Harmless
Posts: 47
Registered: 3-4-2005
Location: Estonia
Member Is Offline
Mood: Hydrated
|
|
Quote: | Originally posted by Darkblade48
I don't suppose memorizing a table of reduction potentials is what you had in mind? |
Of course not, though it would be a great challenge
At the moment I'm writing reactions and trying to identify oxidizer / reducer as quicky as possible, though I'm still mixing them up..Guess, as
Darkblade48 said, the skill will come in time.
If anyone had a problem with this too, could you please share how did *you* learn it?
|
|
Magpie
lab constructor
Posts: 5939
Registered: 1-11-2003
Location: USA
Member Is Offline
Mood: Chemistry: the subtle science.
|
|
I think practice is the best way. There are a limited number of "usual suspects", i.e., Mn, Cr, Fe, etc and you get used to what happens to them in
redox equations.
I always had to determine what was happening to the valence, as you have shown. Also remember that whether an element is reduced or oxidized depends
on the situation. E.g., NO2- can be either an oxidant or a reductant, depending on what it is "competing" against.
The single most important condition for a successful synthesis is good mixing - Nicodem
|
|