Metal Displacement Reactions (WJEC GCSE Chemistry: Combined Science)

Revision Note

Philippa

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Philippa

Expertise

Chemistry

Specified Practical: Metal Displacement Reactions

Introduction

  • The reactivity of metals decreases going down the reactivity series.
  • This means that a more reactive metal will displace a less reactive metal from its compounds
  • Two examples are:
    • Reacting a metal with a metal oxide (by heating)
    • Reacting a metal with an aqueous solution of a metal compound
  • The order of reactivity can be determined using displacement reactions 

Apparatus

  • 1 cm strips of zinc, magnesium, copper and iron metal
  • 5 cm3 of 0.1 mol dm–1 zinc sulfate, magnesium sulfate, copper(II) sulfate and iron(II) sulfate
  • 4 dropping pipettes
  • Dimple tile

Diagram

Diagram to show the set up for the metal displacement reactions

k_UJMEZg_displacement-practical

Set up the dimple tray as shown to investigate the reactivity of zinc, magnesium, copper and iron

Method

  1. Use the dropping pipette to add one to two drops of zinc sulfate to the first row of dimples 
  2. Add one piece of each of the four metals to different dimples (as shown in the diagram)
  3. Record any changes in the table
  4. Note there will be no change for dimples that involve the metal and compound that are contain the same metal (e.g. zinc and zinc sulfate)
  5. Use a different dropping pipette for each solution to avoid contamination
  6. If a reaction occurs, add a tick in the correct box, if a reaction does not occur add in a x
  Zinc Magnesium Copper  Iron
Zinc sulfate        
Magnesium sulfate        
Copper(II) sulfate        
Iron(II) sulfate        

Practical tip

  • Careful not to overfill the dimples with solution as these will overflow and contaminate the other reactions

Analysis of Results 

Results

Results table

  Zinc Magnesium Copper  Iron
Zinc sulfate - x x
Magnesium sulfate x - x x
Copper(II) sulfate -
Iron(II) sulfate x -

Conclusion

  • Magnesium displaces the other metals out of solution
  • Zinc displaces iron and copper out of solution, iron will only displace copper out of solution
  • Copper does not displace any metal out of solution
  • The equations for the reactions that occur are

Mg + ZnSO4 → Zn + MgSO4

Mg + CuSO4 → Cu + MgSO4

Mg + FeSO4 → Cu + FeSO4

Evaluation

  • The metal that shows the most reactions will be the most reactive metal
  • This is because it has displaced the other metals out of the sulfate solution
  • Therefore we can deduce that the order of reactivity is
    • Magnesium (most reactive)
    • Zinc
    • Iron
    • Copper (least reactive)

Worked example

A student set up a series of displacement reactions involving copper, magnesium, iron, and zinc along with their sulfate solutions. 

i) Name the products formed between iron and copper sulfate 

ii) State the formula of copper sulfate 

Answer

i) The products are iron sulfate and copper

ii) The formula for copper sulfate is CuSO4

Exam Tip

There will be no change for dimples that involve the metal and compound that are contain the same metal (e.g. zinc and zinc sulfate).

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Philippa

Author: Philippa

Philippa has worked as a GCSE and A level chemistry teacher and tutor for over thirteen years. She studied chemistry and sport science at Loughborough University graduating in 2007 having also completed her PGCE in science. Throughout her time as a teacher she was incharge of a boarding house for five years and coached many teams in a variety of sports. When not producing resources with the chemistry team, Philippa enjoys being active outside with her young family and is a very keen gardener.