General Chemistry- Oxidation Reduction Reactions Flashcards
What are the enzymes that catalyze oxidations called?
Dehydrogenases
What are oxidation-reduction reactions?
Reactions that involved the transfer of electrons from one chemical species to another
What is the Law of conservation of charge?
Electrical charge can be neither created nor destroyed
What is oxidation?
Loss of electrons
What is reduction
Gain of electrons
According to the Law of conservation of charge, what must occur at the same time?
Oxidation and reduction
What is an oxidizing agent?
Causes another atom in a redox reaction to undergo oxidation and itself oxidation
What’s a reducing agent?
causes the other atom to be reduced and itself oxidized
What is important to note for oxidizing agents? Reducing agents?
Almost all oxidizing agents contain oxygen or another strongly electronegative element (such as a halogen)
Reducing agents often contain metal ions or hydrides (H-)
What are the common oxidizing agents?
O2
H2O2
F2, Cl2, Br2, I2 (halogens)
H2SO4
HNO3
NaClO
KMnO4
CrO3, Na2, Cr2, O7 (seen in organic chemistry)
Pyridinium chlorochromate (PCC) (seen in organic chemistry)
NAD+, FADH (Biochemical reagents that act as energy carriers in biochemistry)
What are the common reducing agents?
CO C B2H6 Sn 2+ and other pure metals Hydrazine (seen in organic chemistry) Zn(Hg) (seen in organic chemistry Lindlar's catalyst (seen in organic chemistry) NaBH4 (seen in organic chemistry) LiAlH4 (seen in organic chemistry) NADH, FADH (Biochemistry)
What oxidizing agents are common in organic chemistry?
CrO3, Na2, Cr2, O7 Pyridinium chlorochromate (PCC)
What oxidizing agents are common in biochemistry?
NAD+, FADH (Biochemical reagents that act as energy carriers in biochemistry)
What reducing agents are common in organic chemistry?
Hydrazine (seen in organic chemistry) Zn(Hg) (seen in organic chemistry Lindlar's catalyst (seen in organic chemistry) NaBH4 (seen in organic chemistry) LiAlH4 (seen in organic chemistry)
What reducing agents are common in biochemistry?
NADH, FADH (Biochemistry)
What is important to note, for biochemical redox reagents such as NAD+
They tend to act as both oxidizing and recuding agents at different times during metabolic pathways. As such, they act as mediators of energy transfer during many metabolic processes.
Technically, the term oxidizing or reducing agent applies to what?
The terms are applied specifically to the atom that loses or gains electrons. However, many science texts will describe the compound as a whole (CrO3 rather than Cr6+) as the oxidizing or reducing agent.
Why are oxidation numbers assigned to atoms?
To keep track of the redistribution of electrons during chemical reaction. Based on the oxidation numbers of the reactants and products, it is possible to determine how many electrons are gained or lost by each atom.
What are the rules to assign an oxidation number to a compound?
- The oxidation number of a free element is zero.
- The oxidation number for a monatomic ion is equal to the charge of the ion.
- The oxidation number of each group IA element in a compound is +1
- The oxidation number of each group IIA element in a compound is +2
- The oxidation number of each Group VIIA element in a compound is -1, except when combined with an element of higher electronegativity.
- The oxidation number of hydrgen is usually +1; however, its oxidation number is -1 in compounds with less electronegative elements (groups IA and IIA)
- In most compounds, the oxidation number of oxygen is -2. The two exceptions are peroxides, for which it is -1 and compounds with more electronegative elements, which would make it +2
- The sum of the oxidation number of all the atoms present in a neutral compound is zero. The sum of the oxidation numbers of the atoms present in a polyatomic ion is equal to the charge of the ion.
Oxidation number is often confused with what? Why?
Formal Charge, because both account for the perceived charge on an element, but do so in different ways.