Metal Displacement Reactions (Oxford AQA IGCSE Chemistry)

Revision Note

Philippa Platt

Expertise

Chemistry

Metal Displacement Reactions

What is a displacement reaction?

  • A displacement reaction occurs when a more reactive metal will displace a less reactive metal from its compound 

  • This can occur by:

    • Reacting a metal with a metal oxide (by heating)

    • Reacting a metal with an aqueous solution of a metal compound

  • It is possible to displace copper from copper(II) oxide by heating it with zinc

    • In this reaction, copper oxide is reduced as it has lost oxygen zinc is oxidises as it has gained electrons

zinc + copper(II) oxide → zinc oxide + copper

Zn    +     CuO    →    ZnO    +    Cu

  • Zinc has been oxidised as it gained oxygen to form zinc oxide

  • Copper(II) oxide has been reduced as it has lost oxygen to form copper

  • It is also possible to displace copper from copper(II) sulfate using iron

iron + copper sulfate → iron(II) sulfate + copper 

Fe + CuSO4 → FeSO4 + Cu

  • We can write this as an ionic equation

  • An ionic equation shows only the atoms and ions that have changed in the reaction

Fe + Cu2+ + SO42– → Fe2+ + SO42– + Cu

  • We can then remove the spectator ions to see the overall change

Fe + Cu2+→ Fe2+ + Cu

Redox in terms of electrons

  • This shows that iron has a greater tendency to form ions than copper

  • Oxidation and reduction can also be explained in terms of electrons

    • Oxidation is the loss of electrons 

    • Reduction is the gain of electrons

  • Fe has lost electrons to form the Fe2+ ion so has been oxidised

  • Cu2+ has gained electrons to form Cu so has been reduced

The redox reaction between Fe and Cu2+

The Fe atom is oxidised (loses electrons) and the copper 2+ ion is reduced (gains electrons)
The Fe atom is oxidised (loses electrons) and the copper 2+ ion is reduced (gains electrons)

Worked Example

Identify which of the following pairs of metals and solutions will result in a reaction.

a. iron and magnesium(II) sulfate

b. zinc and copper(II) sulfate

c. iron(II) chloride and magnesium

Answer

Combinations b and c will result in a reaction

Combination a will not, as magnesium is higher up in the reactivity series than iron so will not be able to displace it from the solution

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Philippa Platt

Author: Philippa Platt

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