Yes, you are right about those oxidation numbers for oxygen.
The half equations need to be written with the starting species going to the final species with the electrons either being added or produced. Like this
Yes, you are right about those oxidation numbers for oxygen.
The half equations need to be written with the starting species going to the final species with the electrons either being added or produced. Like this
Fe3++e→Fe2+
see if you can work out the half reactions now...
Thanks Is it not just...
O−1+e→O−2 O−1→O+e
Those half equations don't seem to make complete sense to me in context of the overall decomposition reaction - but they are the only ones that I can make workable.
ok, so this is called a disproportionation reaction. The initial species is both oxidised (to form oxygen) and reduced (to form water) at the same time.
So you have
H2O2→O2+2H++2e− oxidation
and
2e−+2H++H2O2→2H2O reduction
in the first, oxygen goes from -1 to 0 and in the second it goes from -1 to -2
you see how adding both equations together gives you the overall one?
ok, so this is called a disproportionation reaction. The initial species is both oxidised (to form oxygen) and reduced (to form water) at the same time.
So you have
H2O2→O2+2H++2e− oxidation
and
2e−+2H++H2O2→2H2O reduction
in the first, oxygen goes from -1 to 0 and in the second it goes from -1 to -2
you see how adding both equations together gives you the overall one?
That's fantastic, thankyou very much for your help. One lat quick question would it be correct to say half the oxygen is being oxidised and half reduced - or is that a simplistic way of wording it?
That's fantastic, thankyou very much for your help. One lat quick question would it be correct to say half the oxygen is being oxidised and half reduced - or is that a simplistic way of wording it?
yes. you can imagine that for every two peroxides, one is being oxidised and is supplying the electrons to reduce the other one.
I know this questions was asked awhile ago but i was having problems with this myself, I wanted to add that i found it easier to understand if i though about it as 2 oxygens giving up a hydrogen atom and the other two getting an extra hydrogen atom i.e 2H2O2→2(H+O+H)+(O+H−H)2,2H2O2→2H2O+O2 Yh so i might make a phew chemists angry doing it this way, but for me chemical equations can be abit difficult to understand without breaking it down into the maths that im use to. Also if you think about each hydrogen atom as carrying an electron with it that will be donated to the oxygen this can apply to question.
The OP probably doesn't need help with this anymore so i though it could help anyone who is having difficulty understanding the logic beind this equation as i did.