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Some metallic oxides can be reduced by hydrogen, carbon and carbon monoxide and some cannot. Explain. - Chemistry

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Question

Some metallic oxides can be reduced by hydrogen, carbon and carbon monoxide and some cannot. Explain.

Answer in Brief

Solution

Oxides of highly active metals like potassium, sodium, calcium, magnesium and aluminium have a great affinity towards oxygen and so cannot be reduced by carbon or carbon monoxide or hydrogen.

Metals in the middle of the activity series (iron, zinc, lead, copper) are moderately reactive and are not found in oxide form. These are found in nature as sulphides or carbonate. These are first converted into oxides and can be reduced by C, CO or H2.

\[\ce{ZnO + C ->[400^\circ C]Zn + CO}\]

\[\ce{PbO + CO ->[\Delta]Pb + CO2}\]

\[\ce{CuO + H2 ->[\Delta] Cu + H2O}\]

Metals low in the activity series are very less reactive and the oxides of these metals are reduced to metals by heating alone.

\[\ce{2Ag2O ->[above 300^\circ C] 4Ag + O2}\]

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Chapter 7: Metallurgy - Exercise 7B [Page 129]

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Selina Concise Chemistry [English] Class 10 ICSE
Chapter 7 Metallurgy
Exercise 7B | Q 8.1 | Page 129
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