Balance the equation
I_2 + Cl_2 + H_2O→HIO_3 + HCl (unbalanced)
Balance the equation
I_2 + Cl_2 + H_2O→HIO_3 + HCl (unbalanced)
Problem-Solving Strategy: Using Change in Oxidation Numbers to Balance Oxidation–Reduction Reactions.
1. Assign oxidation numbers:
The oxidation numbers of I_2 and Cl_2 have changed, I_2 from 0 to +5 and Cl_2 from 0 to -1.
2. Write the oxidation and reduction steps. Balance the number of atoms and then balance the electrical charge using electrons:
I_2→2 I^{5+} + 10 e^- (oxidation) ( 10 e^- are needed to balance the +10 charge)
I_2 loses 10 electrons
Cl_2 + 2 e^-→2 Cl^- (reduction) (2 e^- are needed to balance the -2 charge)
Cl_2 gains 2 electrons
3. Adjust loss and gain of electrons so that they are equal. Multiply the oxidation step by 1 and the reduction step by 5:
I_2→2 I^{5+} + 10 e^- (oxidation)
I_2 loses 10 electrons
5 Cl_2 + 10 e^-→10 Cl^- (reduction)
5 Cl_2 gain 10 electrons
4. Transfer the coefficients from the balanced redox equations into the original equation. We need to use 1 I_2 , 2 HIO_3 , 5 Cl_2 , and 10 HCl:
I_2 + 5 Cl_2 + H_2O → 2 HIO_3 + 10 HCl (unbalanced)
5. Balance the remaining elements, H and O:
I_2 + 5 Cl_2 + 6 H_2O → 2 HIO_3 + 10 HCl (balanced)
6. Check: The final balanced equation contains 2 atoms of I , 10 atoms of Cl , 12 atoms of H and 6 atoms of O on each side.