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Reactions of metals
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Reactivity of a metal
How chemically
reactive
it is
Metals with high reactivity
React very
vigorously
when added to
water
Give off
hydrogen
gas
Metals with
low
reactivity
Barely react with
water
or
acid
Don't
react at all
Reactivity series
Places
metals
in order of their
reactivity
Hydrogen
and
carbon
are sometimes included in the reactivity series, even though they are non-metals
Reactivity series
potassium
sodium
lithium
calcium
magnesium
aluminium
zinc
iron
lead
copper
silver
gold
Reaction with water
Reacts very
slowly
Fizzes
, gives off
hydrogen
gas
Explodes
Reaction with acid
Reacts
slowly
with
warm
acid
Extraction
method
Reduction
with
carbon
Decreasing
reactivity
Metals are mined from the
Earth's
crust
More
reactive
metal
Displaces
less
reactive metal from its compounds
The
STABILO BOSS
ORIGINAL is a brand of
highlighter
pens
Key terms
Ionic
equation
Oxidation
Reduction
Reactivity
Reactivity series
Redox
Ionic
equation
An equation that shows the
movement
of ions
Oxidation
A substance gains
oxygen
in a reaction
Reduction
A substance loses
oxygen
in a reaction
Reactivity
The tendency of a
substance
to undergo
chemical
change
Reactivity series
The arrangement of
elements
in order of their
reactivity
Redox
Reduction
and
oxidation
occurring together in a reaction
Metal extraction
Some metals like gold are so
unreactive
they are found as pure metals in the Earth's
crust
and can be mined
Most metals exist as
compounds
in rock and have to be
extracted
from the rock
If there is enough metal compound in the rock to be worth
extracting
it is called an
ore
Extracting less reactive metals
1.
Reduction
with
carbon
2. For example: iron oxide +
carbon
->
iron
+ carbon dioxide
Extracting more reactive metals
Electrolysis
Metals that are less
reactive
than carbon can be extracted by reduction with
carbon
Metals that are more
reactive
than carbon can be extracted using a process called
electrolysis
If a substance gains
oxygen
in a reaction
It has been
oxidised
If a substance loses oxygen in a reaction
It has been
reduced
Oxidation and reduction
iron +
oxygen
-> iron
oxide
iron
oxide
+
carbon
-> iron + carbon dioxide
Displacement reaction
A more
reactive
element takes the place of a
less reactive
element in a compound
Displacement reaction
copper sulfate +
iron
→ iron sulfate +
copper
Iron is more reactive than copper, so iron
displaces
the
copper
in copper sulfate
Reactivity of a metal
Depends on how readily it forms an
ion
by
losing electrons
In the displacement
reaction
of copper sulfate and iron
Iron
forms an ion more easily than
copper
At the end of the reaction you are left with
iron ions
, not
copper ions
Lion
met with
carb
the Earth
Iron is more reactive than copper, so iron
displaces
the
copper
in copper sulfate
Ionic
equations
When an
ionic
compound is dissolved in a solution, we can write the compound as its
separate ions
Displacement reaction of copper sulfate and iron
Fe(s) + Cu (aq) +
90
, (
aq
)-Fe (aq) + 50,- (aq) + Cu(s)
Spectator ions
Ions that are
unchanged
in the reaction and can be
removed
from the equation
Steps for writing an ionic equation
1. Check symbol equation is
balanced
2. Identify all
aqueous
ionic compounds
3. Write those compounds out as
ions
4. Remove
spectator
ions
Oxidation
Loss
of
electrons
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