What is a disproportionation reaction?

A disproportionation reaction is when an element is both oxidised and reduced in the same reaction. You check this by looking at the oxidation state of the element at the begining of the reaction and then what it is in the two products at the end; if the oxidation state has gone up (i.e it has lost electrons) it has been oxidised, and if the oxidation state has gone down (i.e it has gained electrons) it has been reduced. Remember OILRIG to help;

Oxidation Is Loss (of electrons) Reduction Is Gain (of electrons)

An example is the disproportionation of copper in the following reaction:

Cu2O (aq) +  H2SO4 (aq) --> Cu (s) + CuSO4 (aq) + H2O (l)

Here the copper goes from oxidation state +1 in Cu2O to oxidation state 0 in Cu and oxidation state +2 in CuSO4.

Answered by Mia V. Chemistry tutor

44686 Views

See similar Chemistry A Level tutors

Related Chemistry A Level answers

All answers ▸

What is the pH of a 25 ml sample of 0.2 M sulfuric acid? What is the pH after 5 ml of 0.25 M sodium hydroxide is added?


How do amino acids change at different pH?


Describe and explain the trend in reactivity of Group 2 elements with chlorine as the group is descended?


What is the difference in kinetics between a 0th, 1st and 2nd order reaction?


We're here to help

contact us iconContact usWhatsapp logoMessage us on Whatsapptelephone icon+44 (0) 203 773 6020
Facebook logoInstagram logoLinkedIn logo

© MyTutorWeb Ltd 2013–2024

Terms & Conditions|Privacy Policy