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oxidation states (1 Viewer)

okhan90

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heyy i was just wondering how to figure out the oxidation state of a compound such as umm.. like juz say

H2SO4

thanxx
 

okhan90

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lol neutral :S... i dont kno we did it in class before something like

H2SO4 = 0

then valency of h x 2 + 4(valency of S and O) = 0 something like that i fink but im not sure
 

Partisan

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The oxidation number (O.N.) of a monatomic ion is equal to the charge on the ion.

e.g

O.N. of H+ = +1
O.N. of H+ = 2 x +1

The sum of the oxidation numbers of all atoms in a neutral molecule is zero.
Sum of O.N. of H2SO4 = 0 as there is no charge.

e.g if you want to find the O.N. of either ion it's just simple linear algebra.

O.N. of H+ in H2SO4 is 2x - 2 = 0, solve for x.
(- 2 because O.N. & charge for SO42- is - 2)
(2x because 2H+ is diatomic)

O.N. of SO42- in H2SO4 is 2 + x = 0, solve for x.
 
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summary:

sum of oxidation numbers for all neutral atoms/molecules is 0
sum of oxidation numbers for ion is valency of the ion

O is -2 (except for in H2O2, where it is 1)
H is always +1

hope that helps

(so in H2SO4: H is +1, O is -2, total is 0 :. S is 6.)
 

brenton1987

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Partisan said:
(2x because 2H+ is diatomic)
No it isnt.
2H+ is 2 monatomic ions. H2 is diatomic.

vulgarfraction said:
H is always +1
Except in metal hydrides when it is -1.
eg. LiAlH4 which has Li+1, Al+3 and H-1.
 

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