Encyclopedia > Oxidizing

  Article Content

Oxidation

Redirected from Oxidizing

Oxidation is any electrochemical process which involves the formal oxidation state of an atom or atoms (within a molecule) being increased by the removal of electrons. E.g. iron(II) can be oxidized to iron(III):

Fe2+ --> Fe3+ + e

Substances or reactions having the capability to oxidise are said to be oxidative.

Formerly, oxidation simply meant the reaction of a material with oxygen, hence the name, however when the term is now used it is normally in the more general sense. Some common forms of oxidation are the tarnishing of silverware and the rusting of iron:

4Fe + 3O2 --> 2 Fe2O3.

Another example is the burning of hydrocarbons to produce water, carbon dioxide, some partially oxidized forms and heat energy. Complete oxidation of materials containing carbon produces carbon dioxide, which is linked to global warming because it absorbs certain wavelengths of infrared light.

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.

In inorganic chemistry terms, incompletely oxidized carbon takes the form of carbonate, bicarbonate or carbon monoxide.

The opposite of oxidation is reduction. A reaction involving both processes is called a redox reaction.



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
French resistance

... Ceux de la Liberation[?] Chantiers de la Jeunesse[?] or "youth camps" - 1940 General de La Porte du Theil gathered young military servicemen who lived on the road after ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 30.4 ms