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Kuliah Redoks 1
Kuliah Redoks 1
Biology
Industry
Environment
Biology
Biology
0
Industry Extraction of elements Synthesis of different compounds
Environment
Redox reactions - transfer of electrons between species.
Oxidation Reduction
• The Loss of Electrons is Oxidation.
• An element that loses electrons is said to be oxidized.
• The species in which that element is present in a
reaction is called the reducing agent.
Mg Mg2+
Cu2+ Cu
Balancing Redox Equations
Fe2+ + MnO4- + H+ Mn2+ + Fe3+ + H2O
[Red1]a’ [Ox2]b’
Q= E = E0 - RT ln Q
[Ox1]a [Red2]b nF
E0 = Standard Potential
R = Gas constant 8.314 J/K.mol
F- Faraday constant = 94485 J/V.mol
n- number of electrons
G0 = - n F E0
Reaction is favorable
Hydrogen Electrode
• consists of a platinum
electrode covered with
a fine powder of
platinum around
which H2(g) is bubbled.
Its potential is defined
as zero volts.
Hydrogen Half-Cell
H2(g) = 2 H+(aq) + 2 e-
reversible reaction
Galvanic Cell
Galvanic Cells
anode cathode
oxidation reduction
- +
spontaneous
redox reaction
19.2
Galvanic Cells
Cell Diagram
2+ 2+
Zn (s) + Cu (aq) Cu (s) + Zn (aq)
2+ 2+
[Cu ] = 1 M & [Zn ] = 1 M
2+ 2+
Zn (s) | Zn (1 M) || Cu (1 M) | Cu (s)
anode cathode
19.2
Standard Electrode Potentials
2+ +
Zn (s) | Zn (1 M) || H (1 M) | H2 (1 atm) | Pt (s)
2+ -
Anode (oxidation): Zn (s) Zn (1 M) + 2e
- +
Cathode (reduction): 2e + 2H (1 M) H2 (1 atm)
+ 2+
Zn (s) + 2H (1 M) Zn + H2 (1 atm)
19.3
Standard Electrode Potentials
0
Standard reduction potential (E ) is the voltage associated with a reduction reaction at an
electrode when all solutes are 1 M and all gases are at 1 atm.
Reduction Reaction
- +
2e + 2H (1 M) H2 (1 atm)
0
E =0V
Latimer Diagram
Frost Diagram
Latimer Diagram
* Written with the most oxidized species on the left, and the most
reduced species on the right.
w x y z
A+5 B+3 C+1 D0 E-2
-
0.44
What happens when Fe(s) react with H+?
Iron +2 and +3 G = -nFE
2+ -2 x F x -0.44 = 0.88 V
Fe + 2e Fe -0.440-0.440
Fe3+ + 3e Fe + 0.109 F
= -3 x F x –0.036
+0.036 Fe3+
Fe
+0.44 Fe2+
-0.036
0.36
[Fe(CN)6]3- -1.16
[Fe(CN)6]4-
(1) Concentration
(2) Temperature
(3) Other reagents which are not inert
Oxidation of elemental copper
Latimer diagram for chlorine in acidic solution
- +1.2
ClO4 ClO3-
+1.63
HClO Cl2
balance the equation
E = ’E’+ ’’E’’
’+ ’’
E = 1.5 V
Latimer diagram for chlorine in basic solution
+0.89
+0.89
+0.42
ClO- Cl2
Balance the equation…
+0.89
Disproportionation
Element is simultaneously oxidized and reduced.
2 M+(aq) M(s) + M2+(aq)
E0 E0’
M(s) 2M+(aq) M2+(aq)
+0.42 +1.36
ClO- Cl2 Cl-
Reaction is spontaneous
Latimer diagram for Oxygen
1.23 V
Disproportionation
the potential on the left of a species is less positive than that on the
right- the species can oxidize and reduce itself, a process known
as disproportionation.
Is it spontaneous?
Reverse of disproportionation
XN + Ne- X0
NE0 = -G0/F
Look at the Latimer diagram of nitrogen in acidic solution
a b c d e
f g h
c
a
b
d
g
G = G’ + G’’
-nFE = -n’FE’ - n’’FE’’
N2 E = n’E’+ n’’E’’
f n’+n’’
h
a NO3- + 6H+ + 5e- ½ N2 + 3H2O E0 = 1.25V
N(II): NO (2 x 1.68, 2)
N’E0’
N’
N”E0’’
N’E0’-N”E0”
N’’ Slope = E0=
N’-N”
E0 of a redox couple
HNO2/NO
3, 4.4
2, 3.4
N’E0’-N”E0”
Slope = E0=
N’-N”
1V
Oxidizing agent? Reducing agent?
If the line has –ive slope- higher lying species – reducing agent
If the line has +ive slope – higher lying species – oxidizing agent
Identifying strong or weak agent?
NO – Strong oxidant than HNO3
Disproportionation
Element is simultaneously oxidized and reduced.
2 M+(aq) M(s) + M2+(aq)
E0 E0’
M(s) 2M+(aq) M2+(aq)
In acidic solution…
Mn and MnO2
Mn2+
Rate of the reaction hindered
insolubility?
In basic solution…
MnO2 and Mn(OH)2
Mn2O3
From the Frost diagram for Mn….
* Thermodynamic stability is found at the bottom of the diagram.
Mn (II) is the most stable species.
•Any species located on the upper right side of the diagram will be
a strong oxidizing agent. MnO4- - strong oxidizing agent.
•Any species located on the upper left side of the diagram will be
a reducing agent. Mn - moderate reducing agent.
* Although it is thermodynamically favorable for permanganate
ion to be reduced to Mn(II) ion, the reaction is slow except in the
presence of a catalyst. Thus, solutions of permanganate can be
stored and used in the laboratory.
*Exception: Cu
*Reducing strength: goes down
smoothly from Ca to Ni
*Ni- mild reducing agent