Reaction between water and metals

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Reactive metals like sodium and potassium typically form hydroxides when they react with water at room temperature, while non-reactive metals may not form oxides at all. The reactivity series indicates that metals before zinc, including groups 1 and 2 metals and aluminum, react readily with water, producing hydroxides. In contrast, metals from zinc to copper react slowly, forming oxides either over time or when heated. Metals beyond copper show minimal direct reactivity with water. Understanding these reactions is essential for predicting metal behavior in various conditions.
Addieyo
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1. When reacting metals with water, under what conditions do you get hydroxide and under what conditions do you get oxide?

3. is it all reactive metals like Na and K form hydroxides and non-reactive ones form oxides?

Can anyone tell me the details of the reasons for such difference?
 
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You are right - almost all the reactive metals form hydroxides, but some non-reactive do not form metal oxides at all. Also bear in mind that some metals only react at hign temperatures.
You can in general predict how metals react with water according to the potentials:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reactivity_series - those before Zn (groups 1 and 2 metals and Al) react at room temperature and form hydroxides while metals from Zn to Cu react slowly and form oxides either with time or at heating. Metals after Cu hardly react with water directly.
 
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