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Page 1: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

Chapter Four:

TYPES OF CHEMICALREACTIONS ANDSOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY

p125

Page 2: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

Contents

p126

Page 3: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

3

4-1 Water, the Common Solvent p127

A polar molecule

Figure 4.1

(left) The water molecule is polar.(right) A space-filling model of the watermolecule.

Page 4: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

p128

Figure 4.2

Polar water molecules interact with the positive andnegative ions of a salts in the dissolving process.

Page 5: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

p129

Page 6: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

4-2 The mature of AqueousSolutions: Strong andWeak Electrolytes

p129

Solvent

Solute

Strong electrolyte

Weak electrolyte

Non-electrolyte

Concentrated

Dilute

Page 7: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

7

Dissolution of a Solid in a Liquid

Page 8: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

8

Strong electrolytes:

The result of ionizations in water.

p131

Page 9: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

Weak Electrolytes p132

Page 10: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

10

Weak Electrolytes

p133

Page 11: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

Nonelectrolytes p133

Page 12: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

12

Electrolyte Behavior

p130

Page 13: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

13

Electrolytes

p130

Page 14: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

4-3 The Composition ofSolutions

p133

M

M

molaritymoles of soluteliters of solution

HClmoles of HCl

liters of solution3

62

Molarity (M) = moles of soluteper volume of solution in liters:

Page 15: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

Ex 4.1 Calculation of Molarityp134

Calculate the molarity of a solution prepared

by dissolving 11.5 g of solid NaOH in enough

water to make 1.50 L of solution.Solution:

Page 16: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

Ex 4.5 Concentration and Volumep135

Typical blood serum is about 0.14 M NaCl.

What volume of blood contains 1.0 mg NaCl?

Solution:

Page 17: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

Ex 4.6 Solution of KnownConcentration

p136

To analyze the alcohol content of a certain wine, a chemist

needs 1.00 L of an aqueous 0.2 M K2Cr2O7 (potassium

dichromate) solution. How much solid K2Cr2O7 must be

weighed out to make this solution?Solution:

Page 18: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

Dilutionp137

Page 19: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

19

Dilution

Page 20: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

Ex 4.7 Concentration and Volumep138

What volume of 16 M sulfuric acid must be used to

prepare 1.5 L of a 0.1 M H2SO4 solution?

Solution:

Page 21: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

p139

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p137

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23

4-4 Types of chemical Reactionsp140

Types of Solution Reactions

Precipitation reactions

Acid-base reactions

Oxidation-reductions

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4-5 Precipitation Reactions p140

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p141

Figure 4.15

The reaction of K2CrO4(aq) and Ba(NO3)2(aq). (a) The molecular-level

“picture”of the mixed solution before any reaction has occurred. (b)

The molecular-level “picture”of the solution after reaction has to form

BaCrO4(s). Note: BaCrO4(s) is not molecular. It actually contains Ba2+

and CrO42- ions packed together in a lattice. (c) A photo of the solution

has occurred, showing the solid BaCrO4 on the bottom.

Page 26: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

26

Precipitation of Silver Chloride

Page 27: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

Table4.1 Simple Rules for Solubility

1. Most nitrate (NO3) salts are soluble.

2. Most alkali (group 1A) salts and NH4+ are

soluble.3. Most Cl, Br, and Isalts are soluble

(NOT Ag+, Pb2+, Hg2

2+)4. Most sulfate salts are soluble (NOT BaSO4,

PbSO4, HgSO4, CaSO4)5. Most OHsalts are only slightly soluble

(NaOH, KOH are soluble, Ba(OH)2,Ca(OH)2 are marginally soluble)

6. Most S2, CO32, CrO4

2, PO43salts are

only slightly soluble.

p144

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28

Solubility Rules

p144

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Ex 4.8 Predicting Reaction Productsp144

Using the solubility rules in Table 4.1, predict what

will happen when the following pairs of solutions are

mixed. (a) KNO3(aq) and BaCl2(aq); (b)Na2SO4(aq)

and Pb(NO3)2(aq); (c) KOH(aq) and Fe(NO3)3(aq)Solution:

(a)

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(b)

(c)

p145

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4-6 Describing Reactions in Solution p145

Complete ionic equation:

Spectator ions

Net ionic equation:

Page 32: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

p146Three Types of Equations Are Used toDescribe Reactions in Solution

The formula equation gives overall reaction

stoichiometry but not necessarily the actual forms of

the reactants and products in the solution.

The complete ionic equation represents as ions all

reactants and products that are strong electrolytes.

The net equations includes only those components

undergoing a charge. Spectator are not include.

Page 33: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

Ex 4.9 Writing Equations for Reactions p146

For each of the following reactions, write the formula

equation, the complete ionic equation, and the net ionic

equation.

a. Aqueous potassium chloride is added to aqueous silver

nitrate to from a silver chloride precipitate plus aqueous

potassium nitrate.

b. Aqueous potassium hydroxide is mixed with aqueous

potassium nitrate.

Page 34: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

Solution:p146

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35

Notice

The solution with the greatest number of ions is not

necessarily the one in which:

the volume of the solution is the largest.

the formula unit has the greatest number of ions.

Page 36: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

Describing Reactions in Solution

1. Molecular equation (reactants and products as

compounds)

AgNO3(aq) + NaCl(aq) AgCl(s) + NaNO3 (aq)

2. Complete ionic equation (all strong electrolytes

shown as ions)

Ag+(aq) + NO3(aq) + Na+(aq) + Cl-(aq) AgCl(s) + Na+(aq)

+ NO3(aq)

Page 37: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

Describing Reactions in Solution (continued)

3. Net ionic equation (show only components thatactually react)

Ag+(aq) + Cl(aq) AgCl(s)

Na+ and NO3are spectator ions.

Page 38: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

38

4-7 Stoichiometry of PrecipitationReactions

p147

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Ex 4.10 Determining the Mass ofProduct Formed

p147

Calculate the mass of solid NaCl that must be added to

1.50 L of a 0.100 M AgNO3 solution to precipitate all the

Ag+ ions in the form of AgCl.

Solution:

Page 40: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

Ex 4.11 Determining the Mass of Product Formedp148

When aqueous solutions of Na2SO4 and Pb(NO3)2 are

mixed, PbSO4 precipitates. Calculate the mass of

PbSO4 precipitates. Calculate the mass of PbSO4

formed when 1.25 L of 0.0500 M Pb(NO3)2 and 2.00

L of 0.050 M Na2SO4 are mixed.Solution:

Page 41: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

4-8 Acid-Base Reactions p149

An acid is a proton donor An base is a proton acceptor

Page 42: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

Key Titration Terms

Titrant - solution of known concentration

used in titration.

Analyte - substance being analyzed.

Equivalence point - enough titrant added

to react exactly with the analyte.

Endpoint - the indicator changes color

so you can tell the equivalence point has

been reached.

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Performing Calculations for Acid-Base Reactions

1. List initial species and predict reaction.

2. Write balanced net ionic reaction.

3. Calculate moles of reactants.

4. Determine limiting reactant.

5. Calculate moles of required reactant or

product.

6. Convert to grams or volume, as required.

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44

Proton Transfer

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45

Neutralization of a StrongAcid by a Strong Base

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Ex 4.12 Neutralization Reactions p150

What volume of a 0.100 M HCl solution is needed to

neutralize 25.0 mL of 0.350 M NaOH?Solution:

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Acid-Base Titrations p152

1. The exact reaction between titrant and analyte mustbe known (and rapid)

2. The stoichiometric (equivalence) point must beaccurately.

3. The volume of titrant required to reachstoichiometric point must be accurately

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48

Acid-Base Titration

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Ex 4.14 Neutralization Titration p153

A Student carries out an experiment to standardize (determine the

exact concentration of) a sodium hydroxide solution. To do this , the

student weighs out a 1.3009-g sample of potassium hydrogen

phthalate (KHC8H4O4, often abbreviated KHP). KHP molar mass

204.22 g/mol) has one acidic hydrogen. The student dissolves the

KHP in distilled water. Adds phenolphthalein as an indicator, and

titrates the resulting solution with the sodium hydroxide solution to

the phenolphthalein endpoint. The difference between the final and

initial buret reading indicates that 41.20 mL of the sodium hydroxide

solution is required to react exactly with the 1.3009 g KHP. Calculate

the concentration of sodium hydroxide solution.

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Solution:P153

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Ex 4.15 Neutralization Analysis P153

An Environmental chemist analyzed the effluent (the

released waste material) from an industrial process known

to produces the compounds carbon tertrachloride(CCl4)

and benzoic acids (HC7H5O2), a weak acid that has one

acidic hydrogen atom per molecule. A sample this effluent

weighting 0.3518 g was shaken with water, and the

resulting aqueous solution required 10.59 mL of 0.1546 M

NaOH for neutralization. Calculate the mass percent ofHC7H5O2 in the original sample.

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Ex 4.15 Solution:p154

Page 53: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

4-9 Oxidation-Reduction Reactions p154

Oxidation states

Page 54: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

Reaction of Sodium and Chlorine p155

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Table4.2 Rules for Assigning OxidationStates

1. Oxidation state of an atom in an element = 0

2. Oxidation state of monatomic element = charge

3. Oxygen = -2 in covalent compounds (except in peroxides

where it = -1)

4. H = +1 in covalent compounds

5. Fluorine = -1 in compounds

6. Sum of oxidation states = 0 in compounds

7. Sum of oxidation states = charge of the ion

p156

Page 56: Chapter Four - 國立臺北科技大學chpro/Chem/Chap4.pdf · Chapter Four: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY p125. Contents p126. 3 4-1 Water, the Common Solvent

Ex 4.16 Assigning Oxidation Statesp157

Assign oxidation states to all atoms in the following.

(a) CO2; (b) SF6; (c) NO3¯Solution:(a)

(b)

(c)

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57

React

Find the oxidation states for each of the

elements in each of the following compounds:

K2Cr2O7

CO32-

HClO4

MnO2

PCl5

SF4

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Ex 4.17 Oxidation-Reduction Reactions p160

When powdered aluminum metal is mixed with pulverized

iodine crystals and a drop of water is added to help the

reaction get started, the resulting reaction produces a great

deal of energy. The mixture bursts into flames, and a purple

smoke of I2 vapor is produced from the excess iodine. The

equation for the reaction is 2Al(s)+3I2(s) 2AII3(s)

For this reaction, identify the atoms that are oxidized and

reduced, and specify the oxidizing and reducing agents.

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Solution: p160

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4-10 Balancing Oxidation-ReactionEquations

p162

The Half-Reaction Method for Balancing Oxidation-

Reduction Reaction in Aqueous Solutions

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p162

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62

Zinc and Iodine

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63

Barking Dogs

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64

Dry Ice and Magnesium

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65

Reactions of Silver

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66

Balancing Oxidation-ReductionReactions

Cr2O72-(aq) + SO3

-(aq) Cr3+(aq) + SO42-(aq)

How can we balance this equation?

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67

Method of Half Reactions

Cr2O72-(aq) 2Cr3+(aq)

SO3-(aq) + SO4

2-(aq)

How many electrons are involved in each half

reaction?

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68

6e- + Cr2O72- (aq) 2Cr3+ (aq)

SO3- (aq) + SO4

2- (aq) + 2e-

How can we balance the oxygen atoms?

Method of Half Reactions(continued)

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6e- + Cr2O72- (aq) Cr3+ (aq) + 7H2O

H2O +SO3- (aq) + SO4

2- (aq) + 2e-

How can we balance the hydrogen atoms?

Method of Half Reactions(continued)

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This reaction occurs in an acidic solution.

14H+ + 6e- + Cr2O72-(aq) Cr3+(aq) + 7H2O

H2O +SO3- (aq) SO4

2- (aq) + 2e- + 2H+

How can we balance the electrons?

Method of Half Reactions(continued)

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Method of Half Reactions(continued)

14H+ + 6e- + Cr2O72- (aq) Cr3+ (aq) + 7H2O

3[H2O +SO3- (aq) SO4

2- (aq) + 2e- + 2H+]

Cr2O72- (aq) + 3SO3

-(aq) + 8H+(aq) 2Cr3+(aq) +

3SO42-(aq) + 4H2O(l)

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Half-Reaction Method - Balancingin Base

1. Balance as in acid.

2. Add OHthat equals H+ ions (both sides!)

3. Form water by combining H+, OH.

4. Check elements and charges for balance.

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Balance the following oxidation-reduction reactions

that occur in acidic solution.

ClO- (aq) + I- (aq) Cl- (aq) + I3- (aq)

Br- (aq) + MnO4- (aq) Br2 (l)+ Mn2+ (aq)

CH3OH(aq) + Cr2O72-(aq) CH2O(aq) + Cr3+(aq)

React

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Ex 4.19 Balancing Oxidation-ReductionReactions (Acidic)

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Potassium dichromate (K2Cr2O7) is a bright orange

compound that can be reduced to a blue-violet solution of

Cr3+ ions. Under certain conditions, k2Cr2O7 reacts with

ethyl alcohol (C2H5OH) as follows:

Balance this equation using the half-reaction method.

)()()()()()( 223

522

72 lOHgCOaqCrlOHHCaqOCraqH

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p166

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Ex 4.20 Balancing Oxidation-Reductions(Basic)

p167

Silver is sometimes found in nature as large nuggets;

more often it is found mixed with other metals and

their ores. An aqueous solution containing cyanide

ion is often used to extract the silver using the

following reaction that occurs in basic solution:

Balance this equation using the half-reaction method.

)()()()()( 22 aqCNAgaqOaqCNsAg Basic

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