hushai1 said:
If I understand well, whether I put zinc or copper in water some of the metal is going to oxidize and form ions in the water. What is causing this oxidation in water?
Either just H
+ from water autodissociation, or dissolved oxygen, or both.
Copper is low in the reactivity series. Why should it oxidize at all in water?
Reactivity series is only a simplified approximation of the reality. Potential of the cell depends on the ion concentrations. Metals in reactivity series are sorted according to their standard potentials, that is, potential of the metal electrode in contact with 1M solution of the ions. If the ion concentration is substantially different, reactivity series order can fail. See below.
Another question: Does it affect the potential of Zn or Cu half cell if the metal is place in a solution of its ions instead of water?
Potential can be calculated using Nernst equation, and one of the parameters is ion concentration. For example:
E = E_0 + \frac {RT} {nF} \ln [Cu^{2+}]
E
0 is standard potential (determined experimentally - you can get it from tables), n is number of electrons exchanged in the electrode reaction (2 for copper and zinc), T is temperature, R & F are constants.
Obviously equation has no sense for zero concentration, but that's not a problem - metal gets oxidized immediately, so concentration is never really zero. Concentration will grow till the cell potential equals potential of whatever oxidizing agent is present (be it H
+ mentioned earlier). In the case of copper in pure water it means concentration of metal ion is in the 10
-26 M range.