OXIDATION and REDUCTION always occur TOGETHER in the same reaction β called a REDOX reaction.
In terms of OXYGEN:
OXIDATION = GAIN of oxygen.
REDUCTION = LOSS of oxygen.
Examples:
Mg + Oβ β MgO
Magnesium is OXIDISED β it gains oxygen.
CuO + Hβ β Cu + HβO
Copper oxide is REDUCED β it loses oxygen.
Hydrogen is OXIDISED β it gains oxygen.
FeβOβ + 3CO β 2Fe + 3COβ
Iron oxide (FeβOβ) is REDUCED β iron loses its oxygen.
Carbon monoxide (CO) is OXIDISED β it gains oxygen to become COβ.
OIL RIG β Electron Definitions (Overview)
At a more advanced level, oxidation and reduction are defined in terms of ELECTRONS:
OIL RIG:
Oxidation Is Loss (of electrons)
Reduction Is Gain (of electrons)
Think of OIL RIG as a memory device β it only works when you remember what each letter means.
EXAMPLES:
Na β NaβΊ + eβ» β sodium LOSES an electron β sodium is OXIDISED.
Cl + eβ» β Clβ» β chlorine GAINS an electron β chlorine is REDUCED.
In the reaction: Na + Cl β NaβΊ + Clβ»
Sodium is OXIDISED (loses eβ»). Chlorine is REDUCED (gains eβ»).
This is a REDOX reaction β both happen simultaneously.
The substance that causes oxidation is the OXIDISING AGENT.
The substance that causes reduction is the REDUCING AGENT.
Note: the oxidising agent is itself REDUCED (it gains electrons). The reducing agent is itself OXIDISED (it loses electrons).
Oxidising and Reducing Agents
REDUCING AGENT β causes reduction of another substance by donating electrons (it is itself OXIDISED):
Carbon in the blast furnace: reduces iron oxide β carbon is the REDUCING AGENT (it gets oxidised to COβ).
Hydrogen: reduces copper oxide β hydrogen is the REDUCING AGENT (gets oxidised to HβO).
OXIDISING AGENT β causes oxidation of another substance by accepting electrons (it is itself REDUCED):
Oxygen: oxidises metals (is itself reduced to OΒ²β»).
Copper oxide: oxidises hydrogen (is itself reduced to Cu).
Common reducing agents: hydrogen, carbon, carbon monoxide, more reactive metals.
Common oxidising agents: oxygen, chlorine, hydrogen peroxide, potassium manganate(VII).
REDOX in everyday contexts:
Rusting β iron is OXIDISED by oxygen and water.
Combustion β fuels are OXIDISED by oxygen.
Metabolic respiration β glucose is OXIDISED.
Photosynthesis β COβ is REDUCED to glucose.
β οΈ Common Mistake
In a redox reaction, the REDUCING AGENT is OXIDISED (it gives away electrons/oxygen). The OXIDISING AGENT is REDUCED (it receives electrons/gains oxygen). This is counterintuitive β an oxidising agent doesn't stay oxidised, it gets reduced. Remember: agents do the opposite of what they're called.
π Key Equations
Oxidation = gain of oxygen / loss of electrons
Reduction = loss of oxygen / gain of electrons
OIL RIG: Oxidation Is Loss, Reduction Is Gain (electrons)
π Key Note
Oxidation: gain O / lose electrons. Reduction: lose O / gain electrons. OIL RIG. Always happen together (redox). Reducing agent: donates electrons β gets oxidised. Oxidising agent: accepts electrons β gets reduced. Carbon and hydrogen are common reducing agents.
π― Matching Activity β Oxidised or Reduced?
Identify whether each substance is oxidised or reduced in the reaction. β drag the symbols on the right to match the component names on the left.