Consider your experimental results from Part A of this lab. Suppose your strongest reducing agent were added to your strongest oxidizing agent. (Use the lowest possible coefficients. Omit states-of-matter from your answers.) (a) Write the half-reaction for your strongest reducing agent. chemPadHelp (b) Write the half-reaction for your strongest oxidizing agent. chemPadHelp (c) Note the number of electrons in each half reaction. In order to balance the number of electrons lost and gained, the oxidation half-reaction must be multiplied by and the reduction half-reaction must be multiplied by (d) Write the net redox reaction. chemPadHelp

Respuesta :

Answer:

See Explaination

Explanation:

We can define an oxidizing agent as a reactant that removes electrons from other reactants during a redox reaction. The oxidizing agent typically takes these electrons for itself, thus gaining electrons and being reduced. An oxidizing agent is thus an electron acceptor.

Please kindly check attachment for further solutions in details.

Ver imagen kendrich