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Topic 6.2Chemistry SL46 flashcards

Electron transfer reactions

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Card 1 of 466.2.1
6.2.1
Question

What is an oxidation state?

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All Flashcards in Topic 6.2

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6.2.112 cards

Card 1definition
Question

What is an oxidation state?

Answer

A number tracking how many electrons an atom has **gained or lost** relative to the free element — the charge it would have if all bonds were ionic.

Card 2concept
Question

Oxidation state of a free, uncombined element?

Answer

Always **0** (e.g. Na, O_{2}, Cl_{2}, S_{8}).

Card 3concept
Question

Oxidation state of a simple monatomic ion?

Answer

**Equal to its charge** (e.g. Mg²⁺ is +2, Cl⁻ is −1).

Card 4concept
Question

Usual oxidation state of oxygen? Of hydrogen?

Answer

Oxygen is **−2**; hydrogen is **+1** — except peroxides (O is −1) and metal hydrides (H is −1).

Card 5concept
Question

How do oxidation states sum in a species?

Answer

They add up to the **total charge**: 0 for a neutral compound, the ion charge for a polyatomic ion.

Card 6definition
Question

Define oxidation in terms of oxidation state.

Answer

An **increase** in oxidation state — the atom has **lost** electrons (OIL).

Card 7definition
Question

Define reduction in terms of oxidation state.

Answer

A **decrease** in oxidation state — the atom has **gained** electrons (RIG).

Card 8concept
Question

What does OIL RIG stand for?

Answer

**O**xidation **I**s **L**oss, **R**eduction **I**s **G**ain (of electrons).

Card 9definition
Question

What is an oxidising agent?

Answer

The species that **takes** electrons and is itself **reduced** (its oxidation state goes down), e.g. O_{2}, Cl_{2}.

Card 10definition
Question

What is a reducing agent?

Answer

The species that **gives** electrons and is itself **oxidised** (its oxidation state goes up), e.g. a reactive metal.

Card 11concept
Question

How do you spot a redox reaction?

Answer

An atom's oxidation state **changes** during the reaction — so electrons have been transferred.

Card 12example
Question

Oxidation state of S in SO_{4}²⁻?

Answer

**+6** — four O at −2 (= −8) plus S must equal the ion charge −2, so S = +6.

6.2.211 cards

Card 13definition
Question

What is a half-equation?

Answer

An equation showing **just the oxidation or just the reduction** part of a redox reaction, with the electrons (e⁻) included.

Card 14concept
Question

Where do electrons go in an oxidation half-equation?

Answer

On the **right** (product) side — oxidation is **loss** of electrons.

Card 15concept
Question

Where do electrons go in a reduction half-equation?

Answer

On the **left** (reactant) side — reduction is **gain** of electrons.

Card 16concept
Question

What does OIL RIG stand for?

Answer

**O**xidation **I**s **L**oss, **R**eduction **I**s **G**ain (of electrons).

Card 17process
Question

How do you balance a half-equation?

Answer

Balance the **atoms** first, then add **electrons** to the more positive side so the **charge** balances.

Card 18example
Question

Half-equation for Zn → Zn²⁺?

Answer

$\text{Zn} \rightarrow \text{Zn}^{2+} + 2e^{-}$ — an oxidation (loses 2e⁻).

Card 19example
Question

Half-equation for Cu²⁺ → Cu?

Answer

$\text{Cu}^{2+} + 2e^{-} \rightarrow \text{Cu}$ — a reduction (gains 2e⁻).

Card 20process
Question

How do you combine two half-equations?

Answer

**Multiply** so both transfer the same number of electrons, then **add** them and **cancel** the e⁻.

Card 21concept
Question

Why multiply a half-equation before combining?

Answer

So the **electrons lost equal the electrons gained** — they must cancel exactly in the overall equation.

Card 22concept
Question

Final check on a combined redox equation?

Answer

Both the **atoms** and the **total charge** must balance, with **no electrons** left over.

Card 23example
Question

Overall equation for Zn + Cu²⁺?

Answer

$\text{Zn} + \text{Cu}^{2+} \rightarrow \text{Zn}^{2+} + \text{Cu}$ — both halves transfer 2e⁻, which cancel.

6.2.312 cards

Card 24definition
Question

What is the activity (reactivity) series?

Answer

A ranking of metals from **most reactive** (top) to **least reactive** (bottom), by how readily they lose electrons.

Card 25definition
Question

What is a displacement reaction?

Answer

When a **more reactive** metal pushes a **less reactive** metal out of a solution of its ions.

Card 26concept
Question

The displacement rule?

Answer

A **more reactive** metal **displaces** a less reactive metal from a solution of its ions.

Card 27concept
Question

Why is displacement a redox reaction?

Answer

Electrons are **transferred**: the metal is **oxidised** (loses e⁻) and the metal ion is **reduced** (gains e⁻).

Card 28definition
Question

What does OIL RIG mean?

Answer

**O**xidation **I**s **L**oss, **R**eduction **I**s **G**ain — of electrons.

Card 29example
Question

Half-equations for Zn + Cu²⁺?

Answer

Oxidation: Zn → Zn²⁺ + 2e⁻; Reduction: Cu²⁺ + 2e⁻ → Cu.

Card 30concept
Question

Which metals react with dilute acid?

Answer

Metals **above hydrogen** in the series → give a **salt + hydrogen gas**. Cu, Ag (below H) do not.

Card 31concept
Question

Metal + acid products?

Answer

**Salt + hydrogen** (e.g. Mg + 2HCl → MgCl_{2} + H_{2}).

Card 32concept
Question

Which metals react with cold water?

Answer

The most reactive ones (K, Na, Ca) → **metal hydroxide + hydrogen** (e.g. 2Na + 2H_{2}O → 2NaOH + H_{2}).

Card 33process
Question

How do you compare two metals' reactivity?

Answer

Add each metal to the **other's salt solution**; the metal that reacts (displaces) is the **more reactive**.

Card 34concept
Question

Is the reactive metal an oxidising or reducing agent?

Answer

A **reducing agent** — it donates electrons (and is itself oxidised).

Card 35concept
Question

Evidence that displacement happened?

Answer

A **colour change** of the solution and a **deposit** of the displaced metal on the added metal.

6.2.411 cards

Card 36definition
Question

What is an electrochemical cell?

Answer

A device that links a **redox reaction** to a flow of electrons through a wire — either making electricity (voltaic) or driven by it (electrolytic).

Card 37definition
Question

What is a voltaic (galvanic) cell?

Answer

A cell in which a **spontaneous** redox reaction converts **chemical energy into electrical energy** (a battery).

Card 38definition
Question

What is an electrolytic cell?

Answer

A cell in which an external power supply drives a **non-spontaneous** reaction — **electrical energy into chemical energy** (electrolysis).

Card 39concept
Question

What happens at the anode?

Answer

**Oxidation** (loss of electrons) — remember **AN OX**.

Card 40concept
Question

What happens at the cathode?

Answer

**Reduction** (gain of electrons) — remember **RED CAT**.

Card 41concept
Question

Electrode signs in a voltaic cell?

Answer

Anode = **negative (−)**, cathode = **positive (+)**.

Card 42concept
Question

Electrode signs in an electrolytic cell?

Answer

Anode = **positive (+)**, cathode = **negative (−)** — the opposite of a voltaic cell.

Card 43concept
Question

Which way do electrons flow in the external wire?

Answer

Always from the **anode to the cathode** (in both cell types).

Card 44concept
Question

What does the salt bridge do?

Answer

Completes the circuit and keeps each half-cell **neutral**: anions move toward the anode, cations toward the cathode.

Card 45comparison
Question

Voltaic vs electrolytic — key difference?

Answer

Voltaic = **spontaneous**, makes electricity; electrolytic = **driven** by a supply, uses electricity.

Card 46example
Question

Half-equation for silver ions at a cathode?

Answer

$\text{Ag}^{+}(aq) + e^{-} \rightarrow \text{Ag}(s)$ — reduction (gain of one electron).

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