Oxidation #s help
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Oxidation #s help
How oxidation numbers, I know that you would usually look at the number of ligands attached to the central Atom and based off their charges calculate the oxidation number of the whole molecule, but if there is an atom attached to the outside (so not the central atom), can you use only that atom to calculate the net charge of the whole molecule?
Re: Oxidation #s help
I believe you would need to take the other molecules into consideration. I usually go about determining the charge of a molecule using the formal-charge analysis method for each atom and then adding the results.
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Re: Oxidation #s help
Usually, I determine the oxidation number from the charge of the atom.
For example: MgCl2
Knowing that Cl = -1
Mg + 2Cl = 0
Mg + -2 = 0
Mg = +2
Hope this helps
For example: MgCl2
Knowing that Cl = -1
Mg + 2Cl = 0
Mg + -2 = 0
Mg = +2
Hope this helps
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Re: Oxidation #s help
So the overall charge of the coordination complex depends on what atom is on the outside of the brackets ( say it’s Cl which has a -1 charge, which then means the complex has an overall charge of +1). Then to find the oxidation number of the metal in the brackets, determine the charge of the ligands (taking into account how many of each ligand there is), and once determined subtract or add the charges of the ligands from/to the overall charge to get the oxidation state. Hope this helped!
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Re: Oxidation #s help
To reiterate what others have said, you take the charge of the element that interacts with the complex ion (which is what is in brackets). The total charge of the compound should be zero, so you know that the charge on the element(s) outside of the brackets should equal the negative of the total charge of the ion. Then you add all the charges of the ligands up and you take the total charge of the ion and subtract the ligand charges. You'll be left with the charge of the central metal.
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Re: Oxidation #s help
Ruth Rosales 3D wrote:Usually, I determine the oxidation number from the charge of the atom.
For example: MgCl2
Knowing that Cl = -1
Mg + 2Cl = 0
Mg + -2 = 0
Mg = +2
Hope this helps
Do we always assume that the oxidation for Cl is -1 because that's its more stable state?
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