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  Home > JCE Print > Journal of Chemical Education > Issues > 1997  > November  >
Chemical Education Today
Letters
Response to Letter to the Editor about "On Balancing 'Redox Challenges'" by Oliver G. Ludwig (J. Chem. Educ. 1996, 73, 507)
Oliver G. Ludwig
Villanova University, Department of Chemistry, Villanova, PA 19085-1699

Cover
November 1997
Vol. 74 No. 11
p. 1256

Full Text

Author replies to Woolf

A. A. Woolf takes exception to my note on balancing redox equations (J. Chem. Educ. 1996, 73, 507), remarking that oxidation numbers do have a "chemical reality" in the CN- ion, for example. As Woolf mentions, Gaussian orbital and perturbation calculations do show that the N end of the ion is the more negative, but hardly by a full electronic charge. My comment was that further information than would be available to a freshman learning to balance equations would be needed to lead to a preference in oxidation numbers. The beginning student has seen N in the -3 and +3 oxidation states, and carbon in the +2 and -4, but ordinarily would not have met the concepts of either Lewis structures or electronegativity so early in the course.

I consider it important that oxidation number not be confused with charge; only the latter has physical reality. (Surely the Mn atom in MnO4- does not have a charge of +7; Coulomb's law would certainly not permit such charge separation.) Students would get even more confused later in the course when they see formal charges if they were to consider them to be real as well.

Woolf rejects my use of nonintegral oxidation numbers yet uses mean oxidation numbers, which are nonintegral. I fail to see a difference.

I do mention using oxidation numbers as tools, irrespective of whether they make "chemical sense" or not. Similarly, almost everyone speaks of electrons in orbitals, although, strictly, the orbital concept fails for more than one electron system. Later in the course, when the sophistication of the student has increased, we can talk about models versus reality.

By the way, I use the ion-electron/half-reaction method when I teach balancing redox equations. I consider it closer to reality.

More Information
*  Citation
Ludwig, Oliver G. J. Chem. Educ. 1997 74 1256.
*  Keywords
*  History
Created:
Last Updated:
July 27, 1999
June 23, 2005
Link to Article added (June 2004).
  Home > JCE Print > Journal of Chemical Education > Issues > 1997  > November


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