Cracking the SAT Chemistry Subject Test

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
•           Hydrogen’s  oxidation   state   doesn’t change  (it’s   +1  on  both    sides).

•    Oxygen’s    oxidation   state   changes     from    0   to  −2.     This    means   that
nitrogen’s oxidation state must change to balance the reduction of oxygen.

•           What    is  the change  in  nitrogen’s  oxidation   state?  On  the left    side    of  the
equation, its oxidation state is −3 (to balance the total +3 oxidation state of
the 3 hydrogen atoms to which each is bonded). On the right side of the
equation, its oxidation state is +2 (to balance the −2 oxidation of the oxygen
atom to which each is bonded). So its oxidation state changes from −3 to
+2; nitrogen is oxidized.

Here’s the half-reaction that tells us what’s happening to it.


Oxidation:  4N−3    →   4N+2    +   20e−
1 nitrogen atom loses 5 electrons.

You now know that reduction has to balance oxidation. The nitrogen atoms lost a
total of 20 electrons; some other atoms must gain a total of 20 electrons. What
gains electrons and is reduced? Oxygen does. Its oxidation state goes from 0 on
the left to −2 on the right, and here’s that half-reaction.


Reduction:  5O 2    +   20e−    →   10O−2

Of the 10 oxygen atoms that have a −2 oxidation state on the right side, 4 are in
NO and 6 are in H 2 O. The nitrogen atoms lose a total of 20 electrons, and the


oxygen atoms gain a total of 20 electrons.


Many important reactions are redox reactions. In a combustion reaction, a
compound containing carbon and hydrogen reacts with molecular oxygen, O 2 , to


produce CO 2 and H 2 O. Look closely at the combustion of acetylene (C 2 H 2 ), and


you’ll see it’s a redox reaction.


Carbon is oxidized and oxygen is reduced in this reaction. The rusting of iron is
also a redox reaction. Here’s a simplified expression of this process.

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