Question 5.IE: Sodium dithionite, Na2S2O4, is an important reducing agent. ......

Sodium dithionite, Na_{2}S_{2}O_{4}, is an important reducing agent. One interesting use is the reduction of chromate ion to insoluble chromium(III) hydroxide by dithionite ion, S_{2}O_{4}^{2−}, in basic solution. Sulfite ion is another product. The chromate ion may be present in wastewater from a chromium-plating plant, for example. What mass of Na_{2}S_{2}O_{4} is consumed in a reaction with 100.0 L of wastewater having [CrO_{4}^{2−}] = 0.0148 M?

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Analyze

The phrase “reduction of chromate” tells us that the reaction between CrO_{4}^{2−}  and  S_{2}O_{4}^{2−} is a redox reaction. We must obtain a balanced chemical equation for the reaction by using the method summarized in Table 5.6, and then convert 100.0 L of wastewater into grams of Na_{2}S_{2}O_{4}. The necessary conversions are as follows:

100.0 L wastewater → mol CrO_{4}^{2−} → mol  S_{2}O_{4}^{2−} → mol  Na_{2}S_{2}O_{4} → g  Na_{2}S_{2}O_{4}

Solve

1. Write an ionic expression representing the reaction.          CrO_{4}^{2−}(aq) + S_{2}O_{4}^{2−}(aq) + OH^{−}(aq) → Cr(OH)_{3}(s) + SO_{3}^{2−}(aq)

2. Balance the redox equation. Begin by writing skeleton half-equations.            CrO_{4}^{2−} → Cr(OH)_{3}

S_{2}O_{4}^{2−} → SO_{3}^{2−}

Balance the half-equations for Cr, S, O, and H atoms as if the half-reactions occur in acidic solution.          CrO_{4}^{2−} + 5  H^{+} → Cr(OH)_{3} + H_{2}O

        S_{2}O_{4}^{2−} + 2  H_{2}O → 2  SO_{3}^{2−} + 4  H^{+}

Balance the half-equations for charge, and label them as oxidation and reduction.            Oxidation:          S_{2}O_{4}^{2−} + 2  H_{2}O → 2  SO_{3}^{2−} + 4  H^{+} + 2  e^{−}

Reduction:            CrO_{4}^{2−} + 5  H^{+} + 3  e^{−} → Cr(OH)_{3} + H_{2}O

Combine the half-equations into an overall equation.

\begin{array}{r c} \begin{matrix} 3 \times \left\{S_{2}O_{4}^{2−} + 2  H_{2}O \longrightarrow 2  SO_{3}^{2−} + 4  H^{+} + 2   e^{−}\right\} \\ 2 \times \left\{CrO_{4}^{2−} + 5  H^{+} + 3  e^{−} → Cr(OH)_{3} + H_{2}O\right\} \\ \hline 3  S_{2}O_{4}^{2−}+ 2   CrO_{4}^{2−} + 4  H_{2}O \longrightarrow 6  SO_{3}^{2−} + 2   Cr(OH)_{3} + 2  H^{+}\end{matrix} \end{array}

3. Change the conditions to basic solution. Add 2 OH^{−} to each side of the equation for acidic solution, and combine 2 H^{+}  and  2  OH^{−}  to  form  2  H_{2}O on the right.            3  S_{2}O_{4}^{2−}+ 2   CrO_{4}^{2−} + 4  H_{2}O + 2  OH^{−} \longrightarrow 6  SO_{3}^{2−} + 2   Cr(OH)_{3} + 2  H_{2}O

Subtract 2 H_{2}O from each side of the equation to obtain the final balanced equation.            3  S_{2}O_{4}^{2−}(aq) + 2   CrO_{4}^{2−}(aq) + 2  H_{2}O(l) + 2  OH^{−}(aq) \longrightarrow 6  SO_{3}^{2−}(aq) + 2   Cr(OH)_{3}(s)

4. Complete the stoichiometric calculation. The conversion pathway is

100.0 L waste water → mol CrO_{4}^{2−} → mol   S_{2}O_{4}^{2−} → mol  Na_{2}S_{2}O_{4} → g   Na_{2}S_{2}O_{4}.            ? g Na_{2}S_{2}O_{4} = 100.0 L × \frac{0.0148  mol  CrO_{4}^{2−}}{1   L} × \frac{3  mol  S_{2}O_{4}^{2−}}{2  mol  CrO_{4}^{2−}} × \frac{1  mol  Na_{2}S_{2}O_{4}}{1  mol  S_{2}O_{4}^{2−}} × \frac{174.1  g  Na_{2}S_{2}O_{4}}{1  mol  Na_{2}S_{2}O_{4}} = 387  g   Na_{2}S_{2}O_{4}

Assess

In solving this problem the major effort was to balance a redox equation for a reaction under basic conditions. This allowed us to find the molar relationship between dithionite and chromate ions. The remainder of the problem was a stoichiometry calculation for a reaction in solution, much like Example 4-10 (page 127). A quick check of the final result
involves (1) ensuring that the redox equation is balanced, and (2) noting that the number of moles of CrO_{4}^{2−} is about 1.5 (i.e, 100 × 0.0148), that the number of moles of S_{2}O_{4}^{2−} is about 2.25 (i.e, 1.5 × 3/2), and that the mass of Na_{2}S_{2}O_{4} is somewhat more than 350 (i.e, 2.25 × 175).

TABLE 5.5       Balancing Equations for Redox Reactions in Acidic Aqueous Solutions by the Half-Equation Method: A Summary
  • Write the equations for the oxidation and reduction half-reactions.
  • In each half-equation

(1) Balance atoms of all the elements except H and O

(2) Balance oxygen by using H_{2}O

(3) Balance hydrogen by using H^{+}

(4) Balance charge by using electrons

  • If necessary, equalize the number of electrons in the oxidation and reduction half-equations by multiplying one or both half-equations by appropriate integers.
  • Add the half-equations, then cancel species common to both sides of the overall equation.
  • Check that both numbers of atoms and charges balance.
TABLE 5.6       Balancing Equations for Redox Reactions in Basic Aqueous Solutions by the Half-Equation Method: A Summary
  • Balance the equation as if the reaction were occurring in acidic medium by using the method for acidic aqueous solutions summarized in Table 5-5.
  • Add a number of OH^{-} ions equal to the number of H^{+} ions to both sides of the overall equation.
  • On the side of the overall equation containing both H^{+}  and  OH^{-} ions, combine them to form H_{2}O molecules. If H_{2}O molecules now appear on both sides of the overall equation, cancel the same number from each side, leaving a remainder of H_{2}O on just one side.
  • Check that both numbers of atoms and charges balance.

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