What Determines the Oxidizing and Reducing Agents in a Chemical Reaction?

  • Thread starter Thread starter student34
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Oxidizing
AI Thread Summary
In the chemical reaction 5Ag(s) + MnO4-(aq) + H+(aq) >>> 5Ag+(aq) + Mn2+(aq) + H2O(l), MnO4- is identified as the oxidizing agent because it is reduced, while Ag(s) acts as the reducing agent as it is oxidized. The discussion emphasizes the importance of focusing on the reactants to determine redox properties rather than the products. A misunderstanding arose regarding the reduction of the polyatomic ion MnO4-, which does not appear in the products. Clarification was provided that the task is to identify the agents based on the reactants only. The mention of half-reaction equations helped resolve the confusion.
student34
Messages
639
Reaction score
21

Homework Statement



Identify the oxidizing agent and the reducing agent.

5Ag(s) + MnO4-(aq) + H+(aq) >>> 5Ag+(aq) + Mn2+(aq) + H2O(l)

Homework Equations



Increase of electrons is reduction caused by a reducing agent.

Decrease of electrons is oxidation caused by an oxidizing agent.

The Attempt at a Solution


[/B]
The answer has MnO4- as what is reduced and therefor the oxidizing agent, and of course 5Ag+(aq) as the reducing agent.

****
I don't understand why the whole polyatomic ion is said to be reduced; it doesn't even exist on the other side of the equation. I totally understand why Ag(s) because it is clearly getting oxidized.


To me, this is like asking when an ice cube is colder, before it melts or after it melts. It doesn't make sense because there is no ice cube after it melts.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
student34 said:
it doesn't even exist on the other side of the equation.
You're not being asked to identify or assign redox properties to the products. Just to identify which reactant is the oxidizing agent, and which the reducing agent. You've done that, with the one typo,
student34 said:
of course 5Ag+(aq) as the reducing agent.
and that's all you were asked to do. Don't overthink the simple problems.
 
  • Like
Likes student34
Bystander said:
You're not being asked to identify or assign redox properties to the products. Just to identify which reactant is the oxidizing agent, and which the reducing agent. You've done that, with the one typo,

and that's all you were asked to do. Don't overthink the simple problems.

Thank-you, I forgot to look at the half reaction equation.
 
Thread 'Confusion regarding a chemical kinetics problem'
TL;DR Summary: cannot find out error in solution proposed. [![question with rate laws][1]][1] Now the rate law for the reaction (i.e reaction rate) can be written as: $$ R= k[N_2O_5] $$ my main question is, WHAT is this reaction equal to? what I mean here is, whether $$k[N_2O_5]= -d[N_2O_5]/dt$$ or is it $$k[N_2O_5]= -1/2 \frac{d}{dt} [N_2O_5] $$ ? The latter seems to be more apt, as the reaction rate must be -1/2 (disappearance rate of N2O5), which adheres to the stoichiometry of the...
I don't get how to argue it. i can prove: evolution is the ability to adapt, whether it's progression or regression from some point of view, so if evolution is not constant then animal generations couldn`t stay alive for a big amount of time because when climate is changing this generations die. but they dont. so evolution is constant. but its not an argument, right? how to fing arguments when i only prove it.. analytically, i guess it called that (this is indirectly related to biology, im...
Back
Top