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Redox Reactions & Transport Numbers | Complete Electrochemistry Guide

Redox Reactions & Transport Numbers

Electron transfer, oxidation states, and the science of ionic current distribution

🔬 Interactive Ion Migration Simulation

Cations (blue) move toward the cathode (right); anions (red) move toward the anode (left). Adjust the slider to change the cation transport number and observe how the speeds change.

t₊ (cation transport number): 0.60
🔵 Cation speed = a.u. 🔴 Anion speed = a.u. ⚡ Cations carry 0.60 of current

The speed ratio is proportional to the transport numbers. Faster ions carry a larger fraction of the current.

1. Oxidation Reaction

Oxidation can be defined in two complementary ways:

  • Electron loss: Loss of electrons by a substance (increase in oxidation state).
  • Classical definition: Addition of oxygen or a more electronegative element, or removal of hydrogen or a more electropositive element.
Examples:
2S(s) + O₂(g) → SO₂(g)
CH₄(g) + 2O₂(g) → CO₂(g) + 2H₂O(l)

In the second reaction, carbon is oxidized from −4 to +4, while oxygen is reduced from 0 to −2.

2. Reduction Reaction

Reduction is the opposite of oxidation:

  • Electron gain: Gain of electrons by a substance (decrease in oxidation state).
  • Classical definition: Addition of hydrogen or a more electropositive element, or removal of oxygen or a more electronegative element.
Examples:
2CH₂=CH₂(g) + H₂(g) → CH₃–CH₃(g) (hydrogenation)
2FeCl₃(aq) + H₂(g) → 2FeCl₂(aq) + 2HCl(aq) (iron reduced from +3 to +2)

3. Redox Reactions: Electron Transfer

A redox reaction is a chemical reaction in which electrons are transferred between two species. The species that loses electrons is oxidized; the species that gains electrons is reduced. These two processes always occur together.

Electron transfer between A (reducing agent) and B (oxidizing agent).
A → A⁺ + e⁻ (oxidation); B + e⁻ → B⁻ (reduction).

Oxidizing agent (oxidant)
Accepts electrons; undergoes reduction.
Example: KMnO₄, O₂, F₂.
Reducing agent (reductant)
Donates electrons; undergoes oxidation.
Example: Zn, NaBH₄, H₂.
Every redox reaction can be split into two half‑reactions: one oxidation, one reduction. Balancing them separately ensures both atoms and electrons are conserved.

4. Types of Redox Reactions

1. Decomposition Reaction
Compound breaks down into simpler substances.
Examples: 2NaH → 2Na + H₂; 2H₂O → 2H₂ + O₂.
General form: AB → A + B.
2. Combination Reaction
Two or more substances combine to form a single product.
Examples: H₂ + Cl₂ → 2HCl; C + O₂ → CO₂.
General form: A + B → AB.
3. Displacement Reaction
One element displaces another from its compound.
General: X + YZ → XZ + Y.
Metal displacement: CuSO₄ + Zn → Cu + ZnSO₄.
Non‑metal displacement: 2NaBr + Cl₂ → 2NaCl + Br₂.
4. Disproportionation Reaction
A single substance is simultaneously oxidized and reduced.
Example: P₄ + 3NaOH + 3H₂O → 3NaH₂PO₂ + PH₃.
Chlorine in water: Cl₂ + H₂O → HCl + HOCl (Cl from 0 to –1 and +1).

5. Worked Examples of Redox Reactions

Example 1: Hydrogen + Fluorine

H₂ + F₂ → 2HF

Oxidation half: H₂ → 2H⁺ + 2e⁻ (H from 0 to +1)
Reduction half: F₂ + 2e⁻ → 2F⁻ (F from 0 to –1)
Overall: H₂ + F₂ → 2H⁺ + 2F⁻ → 2HF

Example 2: Zinc + Copper(II) Sulfate (Metal displacement)

Zn(s) + CuSO₄(aq) → ZnSO₄(aq) + Cu(s)

Oxidation: Zn → Zn²⁺ + 2e⁻ (Zn is reducing agent, oxidized)
Reduction: Cu²⁺ + 2e⁻ → Cu (Cu²⁺ is oxidizing agent, reduced)
Net ionic: Zn + Cu²⁺ → Zn²⁺ + Cu

Identification: Zn is oxidized (loses electrons), Cu²⁺ is reduced (gains electrons). The blue colour of Cu²⁺ fades as copper metal deposits.

6. Balancing Redox Equations

In acidic or basic media, half‑reaction method is used:

  1. Write separate half‑reactions (oxidation and reduction).
  2. Balance atoms other than H and O.
  3. Balance O by adding H₂O, balance H by adding H⁺ (acidic) or OH⁻ (basic).
  4. Balance charge by adding electrons.
  5. Multiply half‑reactions so that electrons cancel, then add them.
Example (acidic): MnO₄⁻ + Fe²⁺ → Mn²⁺ + Fe³⁺
Balanced: MnO₄⁻ + 5Fe²⁺ + 8H⁺ → Mn²⁺ + 5Fe³⁺ + 4H₂O

7. Applications & Importance of Redox Reactions

Batteries & Electrochemical cells
Galvanic cells convert chemical energy to electrical energy via spontaneous redox reactions (e.g., Zn–Cu cell).
Corrosion & Rusting
Iron oxidizes in presence of oxygen and water, forming rust (Fe₂O₃·xH₂O).
Metallurgy
Extraction of metals from ores: reduction of metal oxides with carbon or other metals.
Combustion
All combustion reactions are redox: fuel + O₂ → CO₂ + H₂O.
Photosynthesis & Respiration
Photosynthesis: CO₂ + H₂O → glucose + O₂ (water oxidized, CO₂ reduced).
Respiration: glucose + O₂ → CO₂ + H₂O + energy.
Analytical Chemistry
Redox titrations (e.g., permanganometry, iodometry) determine concentrations of oxidizing or reducing agents.
Industrial Processes
Bleaching, water disinfection (chlorine), electroplating, production of hydrogen and chlorine via electrolysis.
Environmental Chemistry
Removal of pollutants by redox reactions (e.g., chromium(VI) reduction to Cr(III)).

The concept of redox reactions is fundamental to understanding energy production, material degradation, and countless chemical transformations in nature and technology.

8. Transport Numbers (Transference Numbers) in Electrochemistry

The transport number (or transference number, also called Hittorf number) of an ion is the fraction of the total electric current carried by that ion in an electrolyte solution. Since cations and anions move at different speeds, they contribute differently to conductivity.

t₊ + t₋ = 1

where t₊ is the cation transport number and t₋ is the anion transport number.

8.1 Mathematical Relationship

If u₊ and u₋ are ionic mobilities (drift velocity per unit electric field):

t₊ = u₊ / (u₊ + u₋)    and    t₋ = u₋ / (u₊ + u₋)
Also, t₊ = λ₊ / Λm and t₋ = λ₋ / Λm, where λ is ionic conductivity and Λm is total molar conductivity.

8.2 Hittorf’s Method (Concentration Change Method)

Hittorf’s method determines transport numbers by measuring the concentration changes in the anode and cathode compartments before and after electrolysis. For a salt like AgNO₃:

t₊ = (Loss of Ag⁺ from anode compartment) / (Total silver deposited in coulometer)
Example: In a Hittorf cell with AgNO₃, loss at anode = 0.026 g, coulometer = 0.040 g → t₊ = 0.026/0.040 = 0.65, t₋ = 0.35.

8.3 Moving Boundary Method

The moving boundary method is more accurate and directly measures the velocity of a boundary between two electrolyte solutions. The transport number is given by:

t₊ = (ν z F C) / I · (dx/dt)

where ν = number of cations per formula unit, z = charge, F = Faraday constant, C = concentration, I = current, and dx/dt = boundary velocity.

8.4 Factors Affecting Transport Numbers

FactorEffect
TemperatureIncreases mobility of slower ions; t₊ and t₋ tend toward 0.5.
ConcentrationHigh concentration can cause ion pairing; abnormal transport numbers possible.
Nature of ionsH⁺ and OH⁻ have very high transport numbers due to the Grotthuss mechanism (tH+ ≈ 0.83 in HCl).
HydrationHighly hydrated ions move slower and have lower transport numbers.

8.5 Importance of Transport Numbers

  • Battery design: High t₊ (e.g., Li⁺ in lithium batteries) ensures efficient charge transfer.
  • Membrane science: Ion‑selective membranes are characterized by their transport numbers.
  • Electrophoresis: Separation of ions based on mobility differences.
  • Corrosion studies: Understanding ionic movement in electrolyte solutions.

9. Quick Reference: Key Terms

TermDefinition
OxidationLoss of electrons, increase in oxidation state.
ReductionGain of electrons, decrease in oxidation state.
Oxidizing agentAccepts electrons, gets reduced.
Reducing agentDonates electrons, gets oxidized.
Transport numberFraction of total current carried by a specific ion.
Hittorf methodMeasures transport numbers via concentration changes.
Ionic mobilityDrift velocity of an ion per unit electric field.

10. Summary

  • Redox reactions involve electron transfer; oxidation = loss, reduction = gain (OIL RIG).
  • Types: decomposition, combination, displacement, disproportionation.
  • Transport numbers (t₊, t₋) describe current sharing between ions; t₊ + t₋ = 1.
  • Determined by Hittorf’s method or moving boundary method.
  • Both concepts are essential for understanding batteries, corrosion, and industrial electrolysis.
Redox: OIL RIG    Transport numbers: t₊ + t₋ = 1

📺 Video Lectures (Redox Reactions)

Complete Lectures

Detailed explanations of oxidation, reduction, half-reactions, and types of redox reactions.

Complete guide to redox reactions and transport numbers – all content original, with interactive simulation and detailed examples.
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