Chemistry, asked by krishsantiniketan, 1 month ago

Why is there a color change from yellow to clear in the redox reaction FeCl3+SnCl2=SnCl4+FeCl2?​

Answers

Answered by Ambardeep
6

Answer:

Correct option is

A

SnCl

2

is oxidised and FeCl

3

acts as oxidising agent.

Separating the oxidation and reduction reaction from the redox reaction:

SnCl

2

+2FeCl

3

→SnCl

4

+2FeCl

2

assigning the oxidation number on central atom (Sn and Fe) in each molecules by considering oxidation number of Cl=−1 we get oxidation state as:

Sn

+2

Cl

2

+2

Fe

+3

Cl

3

Sn

+4

Cl

4

+2

Fe

+2

Cl

2

as the oxidation number of Sn changes from +2 to +4 as:

SnCl

2

→SnCl

4

its a oxidation reaction where SnCl

2

gets oxidized and acts as reducing agent

Similarly, as the oxidation number of Fe changes from +3 to +2 as:

FeCl

3

→FeCl

2

its a reduction reaction where FeCl

3

gets reduced and acts as oxidising agent.

Therefore SnCl

2

is oxidised and FeCl

3

acts as oxidising agent.

Answered by yuvrajrana10
0

Answer:

hii

Explanation:

.

.

.

Why is there a color change from yellow to clear in the redox reaction FeCl3+SnCl2=SnCl4+FeCl2?

Yuvraj here

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