Dictionary Definition
reducing
Noun
1 any process in which electrons are added to an
atom or ion (as by removing oxygen or adding hydrogen); always
occurs accompanied by oxidation of the reducing agent [syn:
reduction]
2 loss of excess weight (as by dieting); becoming
slimmer; "a doctor supervised her reducing"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Verb
reducing- present participle of reduce
Noun
- Action of the verb to reduce
Translations
- Hebrew:
Extensive Definition
Redox (shorthand for reduction/oxidation
reaction) describes all chemical
reactions in which atoms have their oxidation
number (oxidation
state) changed.
This can be either a simple redox process such as
the oxidation of carbon
to yield carbon
dioxide, or the reduction of carbon by hydrogen to yield methane (CH4), or it can be a
complex process such as the oxidation of sugar in the human body through a
series of very complex electron
transfer processes.
The term redox comes from the two concepts of
reduction and oxidation. It can be explained in simple terms:
Though sufficient for many purposes, these
descriptions are not precisely correct. Oxidation and reduction
properly refer to a change in oxidation number—the actual transfer
of electrons may never occur. Thus, oxidation is better defined as
an increase in oxidation number, and reduction as a decrease in
oxidation number. In practice, the transfer of electrons will
always cause a change in oxidation number, but there are many
reactions which are classed as "redox" even though no electron
transfer occurs (such as those involving covalent bonds).
Non-redox reactions, which do not involve changes
in formal
charge, are known as
metathesis reactions.
Oxidizing and reducing agents
Substances that have the ability to oxidize other substances are said to be oxidative and are known as oxidizing agents, oxidants or oxidizers. Put another way, the oxidant removes electrons from another substance, and is thus reduced itself. And because it "accepts" electrons it is also called an electron acceptor.Oxidants are usually chemical substances with
elements in high oxidation numbers (e.g., H2O2,
MnO4−,
CrO3,
Cr2O72−, OsO4) or
highly electronegative
substances that can gain one or two extra electrons by oxidizing a
substance (O, F, Cl, Br).
Substances that have the ability to reduce other
substances are said to be reductive and are known as reducing
agents, reductants, or reducers. Put in another way, the
reductant transfers electrons to another substance, and is thus
oxidized itself. And because it "donates" electrons it is also
called an electron
donor. Reductants in chemistry are very diverse. Metal
reduction—electropositive elemental metals can be used (Li, Na, Mg,
Fe, Zn, Al). These metals donate or give away electrons readily.
Other kinds of reductants are hydride transfer reagents (NaBH4,
LiAlH4), these reagents are widely used in organic
chemistry, primarily in the reduction of carbonyl compounds to alcohols. Another useful method
is reductions involving hydrogen gas (H2) with a palladium, platinum, or nickel catalyst. These catalytic
reductions are primarily used in the reduction of carbon-carbon
double or triple bonds.
The chemical way to look at redox processes is
that the reductant transfers electrons to the oxidant. Thus, in the
reaction, the reductant or reducing agent loses electrons and is
oxidized and the oxidant or oxidizing agent gains electrons and is
reduced. The pair of an oxidizing and reducing agent that are
involved in a particular reaction is called a redox pair.
Examples of redox reactions
A good example is the reaction between hydrogen and fluorine:- \mathrm_ + \mathrm_ \longrightarrow 2\mathrm
- \mathrm_ \longrightarrow 2\mathrm^ + 2e^-
- \mathrm_ + 2e^- \longrightarrow 2\mathrm^
Analysing each half-reaction in isolation can
often make the overall chemical process clearer. Because there is
no net change in charge during a redox reaction, the number of
electrons in excess in the oxidation reaction must equal the number
consumed by the reduction reaction (as shown above).
Elements, even in molecular form, always have an
oxidation number of zero. In the first half reaction, hydrogen is
oxidized from an oxidation number of zero to an oxidation number of
+1. In the second half reaction, fluorine is reduced from an
oxidation number of zero to an oxidation number of
−1.
When adding the reactions together the electrons
cancel:
- \frac
And the ions combine to form hydrogen
fluoride:
- \mathrm_ + \mathrm_\, \ \longrightarrow \ 2\mathrm^ + 2\mathrm^\ \longrightarrow \ 2\mathrm
Displacement reactions
Redox occurs in
single displacement reactions or substitution
reactions. The redox component of this type of reaction is the
change of oxidation state (charge) on certain atoms, not the actual
exchange of atoms in the compounds.
For example, in the reaction between iron and
copper(II) sulphate solution:
- \mathrm + \mathrm_ \longrightarrow \mathrm_ + \mathrm
The ionic equation for this reaction is:
- \mathrm + \mathrm^ \longrightarrow \mathrm^ + \mathrm
As two half-equations, it is seen that the iron
is oxidized:
- \mathrm \longrightarrow \mathrm^ + 2^
And the copper is reduced:
- \mathrm^ + 2^ \longrightarrow \mathrm
Other examples
- iron(II) oxidizes to iron(III):
- Fe2+ → Fe3+ + e−
- hydrogen peroxide reduces to hydroxide in the presence of an acid:
- H2O2 + 2 e− → 2 OH−
overall equation for the above:
- 2Fe2+ + H2O2 + 2H+ → 2Fe3+ + 2H2O
- denitrification, nitrate reduces to nitrogen in the presence of an acid:
- 2NO3− + 10e− + 12 H+ → N2 + 6H2O
- iron oxidizes to iron(III) oxide and oxygen is reduced forming iron(III) oxide (commonly known as rusting, which is similar to tarnishing):
- 4Fe + 3O2 → 2 Fe2O3
- Combustion of hydrocarbons, e.g. in an internal combustion engine, produces water, carbon dioxide, some partially oxidized forms such as carbon monoxide and heat energy. Complete oxidation of materials containing carbon produces carbon dioxide.
- In organic chemistry, stepwise oxidation of a hydrocarbon produces water and, successively, an alcohol, an aldehyde or a ketone, carboxylic acid, and then a peroxide.
Redox reactions in industry
The primary process of reducing ore to produce
metals is discussed in the article on Smelting.
Oxidation is used in a wide variety of industries
such as in the production of cleaning products.
Redox reactions are the foundation of electrochemical
cells.
Redox reactions in biology
<div class="thumb tright" style="background-color: #f9f9f9; border: 1px solid #CCCCCC; margin:0.5em;"> Top: ascorbic acid (reduced form of Vitamin C)Bottom: dehydroascorbic acid (oxidized form of Vitamin C)Many important biological processes involve
redox reactions.
Cellular
respiration, for instance, is the oxidation of glucose (C6H12O6) to CO2 and
the reduction of oxygen
to water. The summary
equation for cell respiration is:
- C6H12O6 + 6 O2 → 6 CO2 + 6 H2O
- The process of cell respiration also depends heavily on the
reduction of NAD+ to NADH and the
reverse reaction (the oxidation of NADH to NAD+). Photosynthesis
is essentially the reverse of the redox reaction in cell
respiration:
- 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + light energy → C6H12O6 + 6 O2
Biological energy is frequently stored and
released by means of redox reactions. Photosynthesis
involves the reduction of carbon
dioxide into sugars
and the oxidation of water
into molecular oxygen.
The reverse reaction, respiration,
oxidizes sugars to produce carbon dioxide and water. As
intermediate steps, the reduced carbon compounds are used to reduce
nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+), which then
contributes to the creation of a proton
gradient, which drives the synthesis of adenosine
triphosphate (ATP) and is maintained by the reduction of
oxygen. In animal cells, mitochondria perform
similar functions. See Membrane
potential article.
The term redox state is often used to describe
the balance of
NAD+/NADH and
NADP+/NADPH in a biological system such as a cell or organ. The
redox state is reflected in the balance of several sets of
metabolites (e.g., lactate and
pyruvate, beta-hydroxybutyrate
and acetoacetate)
whose interconversion is dependent on these ratios. An abnormal
redox state can develop in a variety of deleterious situations,
such as hypoxia,
shock,
and sepsis. Redox
signaling involves the control of cellular processes by redox
processes.
Redox cycling
A wide variety of aromatic compounds are enzymatically reduced to form free radicals that contain one more electron than their parent compounds. In general, the electron donor is any of a wide variety of flavoenzymes and their coenzymes. Once formed, these anion free radicals reduce molecular oxygen to superoxide and regenerate the unchanged parent compound. The net reaction is the oxidation of the flavoenzyme's coenzymes and the reduction of molecular oxygen to form superoxide. This catalytic behavior has been described as futile cycle or redox cycling.Examples of redox cycling-inducing molecules are
the herbicide paraquat and other viologens and quinones such as menadione.
Balancing redox reactions
Describing the overall electrochemical reaction
for a redox process requires a balancing of the component half
reactions for oxidation and reduction. For reactions in aqueous
solution, this general involves adding H+ , OH- ion, H2O and
electrons to compensate the oxidation changes.
Acid medium
In acid medium H+ ions and water are added to half reactions to balance the overall reaction. For example, when manganese (II) reacts with sodium bismuthate.- \mbox\mbox^(aq) + \mbox_3(s)\rightarrow\mbox^(aq) +
\mbox_4^(aq)\,
- \mbox\mbox_2\mbox(l)+\mbox^(aq)\rightarrow\mbox_4^(aq) + \mbox^(aq)+\mbox^\,
- \mbox\mbox^+ \mbox^(aq) + \mbox_3^(s)\rightarrow\mbox^(aq) + \mbox_2\mbox(l)\,
- \mbox\mbox_2\mbox(l)+\mbox^(aq)\rightarrow\mbox_4^(aq) + \mbox^(aq)+\mbox^\,
- \mbox_2\mbox(l)+\mbox^(aq)\rightarrow\mbox_4^(aq) +
\mbox^(aq)+\mbox^\,
- \mbox^+ \mbox^(aq) + \mbox_3^(s)\rightarrow\mbox^(aq) + \mbox_2\mbox(l)\,
- \mbox^(aq) + \mbox^(aq)+ \mbox_3(s)\rightarrow\mbox_2\mbox(l) + \mbox_4^(aq)+\mbox^(aq)+\mbox^(aq)\,
Similarly for a propane fuel cell under
acidic conditions:
- \mbox\mbox_\mbox_+\mbox_\rightarrow\mbox_+\mbox_\mbox\,
- \mbox\mbox^ + \mbox_+ \mbox^\rightarrow\mbox_\mbox\,
- \mbox\mbox_\mbox+\mbox_\mbox_\rightarrow\mbox_+\mbox^+\mbox^\,
- \mbox\mbox^ + \mbox_+ \mbox^\rightarrow\mbox_\mbox\,
- \mbox^+\mbox_+\mbox^\rightarrow\mbox_\mbox\,
- \mbox_\mbox+\mbox_\mbox_\rightarrow\mbox_+\mbox^+\mbox^\,
- \mbox_\mbox_+\mbox_\rightarrow\mbox_+\mbox_\mbox\,
Basic medium
In basic medium OH- ions and water are added to half reactions to balance the overall reaction. For example, in the reaction between potassium permanganate and sodium sulfite:-
\mbox\mbox_+\mbox_\mbox_3+\mbox_2\mbox\rightarrow\mbox_+\mbox_\mbox_+\mbox\,
- \mbox\mbox^+\mbox_\mbox+\mbox_^\rightarrow\mbox_+\mbox^\,
- \mbox\mbox^+\mbox^_\rightarrow\mbox^_+\mbox_\mbox+\mbox^\,
- \mbox\mbox^+\mbox_\mbox+\mbox_^\rightarrow\mbox_+\mbox^\,
- \mbox^+\mbox_\mbox+\mbox_^\rightarrow\mbox_+\mbox^\,
- \mbox^+\mbox^_\rightarrow\mbox^_+\mbox_\mbox+\mbox^\,
- \mbox_+\mbox_\mbox_3+\mbox_2\mbox\rightarrow\mbox_+\mbox_\mbox_+\mbox\,
See also
External links
- Chemical Equation Balancer, balances chemical equations, including Reduction-Oxidation (redox) reactions and reactions with several distinct solutions. Also teaches how to balance an equation using matrices and linear algebra.
- Redox reactions calculator
- Redox reactions at Chemguide
- Online redox reaction equation balancer, balances equations of any half-cell and full reactions
reducing in Bulgarian: Окислително-редукционни
процеси
reducing in Arabic: أكسدة
reducing in Bosnian: Redoks reakcija
reducing in Catalan: Reacció
d'oxidació-reducció
reducing in Czech: Redoxní reakce
reducing in Danish: Redoxreaktion
reducing in German: Redoxreaktion
reducing in Estonian: Redoksreaktsioon
reducing in Spanish: Reducción-oxidación
reducing in Esperanto: Redoksa reakcio
reducing in French: Réaction
d'oxydo-réduction
reducing in Korean: 산화·환원 반응
reducing in Croatian: Redoks
reducing in Ido: Redoxo
reducing in Indonesian: Reduksi
reducing in Italian: Ossido-riduzione
reducing in Hebrew: חמצון חיזור
reducing in Dutch: Redoxreactie
reducing in Japanese: 酸化還元反応
reducing in Polish: Reakcja redoks
reducing in Russian:
Окислительно-восстановительные реакции
reducing in Slovak: Oxidačno-redukčná
reakcia
reducing in Serbian: Оксидација
reducing in Finnish:
Hapetus-pelkistysreaktio
reducing in Swedish: Redox
reducing in Chinese: 氧化还原反应
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abating, allaying, alleviating, assuaging, blunting, calorie-counting,
chastening, cushioning, dampening, damping, deadening, diminishing, dulling, easing, lessening, mitigating, relaxing, slenderizing, slimming, softening, subduing, tempering,
weight-watching