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Balancing Redox in Alkaline Medium

Balancing Redox in Alkaline Medium | CHEMCA JEE & NEET
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Physical Chemistry Target: JEE Main & Advanced, NEET-UG

Redox Reactions: Balancing in Alkaline Medium

Master the dual strategies to balance complex redox processes in an Alkaline (Basic) Medium using the Oxidation Number Method! Abhishek Sengar Sir details structural transitions, electronic equalizations, and how to safely utilize $\text{OH}^-$ and $\text{H}_2\text{O}$ to manage elements and charges.

Video Lecture Broadcast

Instructor: Abhishek Sengar Sir Topic: Oxidation Number Method (Alkaline) Subject: Basic Medium Principles

Interactive Lecture Timestamps

Click any topic below to seek the video explanation to that specific alkaline balancing concept.

In-Depth Lecture Notes & Summary

01

Understanding Alkaline Medium Demands

In alkaline (basic) media, balancing equations poses a unique challenge because the abundance of free hydroxide ions ($\text{OH}^-$) restricts the use of free protonic hydrogen ($\text{H}^+$). Therefore, visual adjustments must preserve basicity while strictly obeying the Conservation of Mass and Charge.

02

The Two Approaches for Alkaline Balancing

Abhishek Sengar Sir explains that students can confidently use either of the following two standard pathways:

Method A: Acidic first, then convert

  1. Balance skeletal atoms, then O with $\text{H}_2\text{O}$ and H with $\text{H}^+$.
  2. Count the exact number of $\text{H}^+$ present.
  3. Add an equivalent count of $\text{OH}^-$ to both LHS and RHS.
  4. Combine LHS $\text{H}^+ + \text{OH}^-$ to form $\text{H}_2\text{O}$.
  5. Simplify water molecules on opposite sides.

Method B: Direct Alkaline Balancing

  1. Assign oxidation numbers and equalize overall electron transfers.
  2. Balance elements other than oxygen and hydrogen.
  3. For Oxygen deficit: Add $1\text{H}_2\text{O}$ per O deficit to the deficient side.
  4. For Hydrogen deficit: Add $1\text{H}_2\text{O}$ to the H-deficient side and an equal number of $\text{OH}^-$ to the opposite side simultaneously.
03

Worked Disproportionation Mechanism

Let's look at chlorine disproportionating in a hot alkaline solution—an extremely frequent board and competitive exam question:

Disproportionation of Chlorine ($\text{Cl}_2 \to \text{Cl}^- + \text{ClO}_3^-$)

Step 1: Write Separate Changes. Here, Chlorine is simultaneously oxidized ($0 \to +5$ in $\text{ClO}_3^-$) and reduced ($0 \to -1$ in $\text{Cl}^-$).

Step 2: Determine Electron shifts.
• Reduction: $\text{Cl}_2^0 \to 2\text{Cl}^-$ (Gain of $2e^-$ per $\text{Cl}_2$ molecule)
• Oxidation: $\text{Cl}_2^0 \to 2\text{ClO}_3^-$ (Loss of $10e^-$ per $\text{Cl}_2$ molecule)

Step 3: Equalize Shifts. Multiply the reduction reactant pair by 5 (total $10e^-$ gain) to balance the oxidation reaction's $10e^-$ loss. This gives:

$$6\text{Cl}_2 \to 10\text{Cl}^- + 2\text{ClO}_3^- \implies 3\text{Cl}_2 \to 5\text{Cl}^- + \text{ClO}_3^- \text{ (Simplified)}$$

Step 4: Balance Oxygen and Hydrogen in Alkaline Medium.
• There are 3 Oxygen atoms on RHS and 0 on LHS. To balance, add $6\text{OH}^-$ to LHS and $3\text{H}_2\text{O}$ to RHS. Let's verify:

$$3\text{Cl}_2 + 6\text{OH}^- \to 5\text{Cl}^- + \text{ClO}_3^- + 3\text{H}_2\text{O}$$

Verification check: LHS Atoms: $\text{Cl}=6, \text{O}=6, \text{H}=6$. RHS Atoms: $\text{Cl}=6, \text{O}=6, \text{H}=6$. LHS Charge: $-6$. RHS Charge: $5(-1) + (-1) = -6$. Perfectly Balanced!

Redox Solver & Step-Simulator

Select an alkaline reaction template below and progress step-by-step to visualize the balancing mechanics live!

Step 1 of 6
REACTION STATE SCHEMATIC:
Step 1: Assigning Oxidation States

Computing floating states...

Algebraic Balance Sheet Verification:
Reactant Side (LHS)
Atoms: Mn=1, Br=1, O=4
Charge: -2
Product Side (RHS)
Atoms: Mn=1, Br=1, O=5
Charge: -1
Unbalanced Status

Alkaline Medium Rules Grid

Review the protocol sequences taught by Abhishek Sir for managing Oxygen/Hydrogen in basic conditions.

Method A (Conversion)

Add $\text{OH}^-$ to both sides

$\text{H}^+ + \text{OH}^- \to \text{H}_2\text{O}$
Method B (Direct)

Balance H deficit

$1\text{H}_2\text{O} \text{ \& } 1\text{OH}^-$ opposing
Final Conservation Rule:

$$\sum \text{Charge}_{\text{LHS}} = \sum \text{Charge}_{\text{RHS}}$$

Lecture Supplementary Quiz

Test your understanding of coefficients, disproportionation reactions, and basic adjustments with instant feedback.

Question 1 of 5

Score: 0/0

Doubt with Basic Mediums?

If you have doubts regarding disproportionations, $\text{OH}^-$ distributions, or basic coefficients, email Abhishek Sir directly!

Email abhishek.sengar@chemca.in →
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1 comment:

  1. Anonymous17:02

    Exactly what I needed to read today.

    ReplyDelete

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