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This page looks at some aspects of vanadium chemistry
required for UK A' level exams. That includes the use of vanadium(V) oxide as
a catalyst in the Contact Process, and converting between the various
vanadium oxidation states.
Vanadium(V) oxide as a catalyst in the Contact Process
The overall reaction
During the Contact Process for manufacturing sulphuric
acid, sulphur dioxide has to be converted into sulphur trioxide. This is done
by passing sulphur dioxide and oxygen over a solid vanadium(V) oxide
catalyst.
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Note: The equation is written with the half
in it to make the explanation below tidier. You may well be familiar with the
equation written as twice that shown, but the present version is perfectly
acceptable. It is also shown as a one-way rather than a reversible reaction
to avoid complicating things.
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How the reaction works
This is a good example of the ability of transition metals
and their compounds to act as catalysts because of their ability to change
their oxidation state (oxidation number).
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Note: If you aren't sure about oxidation
states, you really ought to follow this link before you go on. You will
need to be confident about oxidation states throughout the whole of the
present page.
Use the BACK button on your browser to return to this
page.
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The sulphur dioxide is oxidised to sulphur trioxide by the
vanadium(V) oxide. In the process, the vanadium(V) oxide is reduced to vanadium(IV)
oxide.
The vanadium(IV) oxide is then re-oxidised by the oxygen.
Although the catalyst has been temporarily changed during
the reaction, at the end it is chemically the same as it started.
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Note: If you want more detail about the
Contact Process, you will find a full description of the conditions used
and the reasons for them by following this link.
If you want to find out more about catalysis,
this link will take you to an introductory page about catalysts with further
links to other catalysis pages if you want them.
Use the BACK button on your browser (or the History file
of Go menu) if you want to return to this page later.
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Vanadium's oxidation states
Vanadium has oxidation states in its compounds of +5, +4,
+3 and +2. This section looks at ways of changing between them. It starts
with a bit of description, and then goes on to look at the reactions in terms
of standard redox potentials (standard electrode potentials).
Observing the changes in the lab
Reducing vanadium(V) in stages to vanadium(II)
The usual source of vanadium in the +5 oxidation state is ammonium
metavanadate, NH4VO3. This isn't very soluble in water
and is usually first dissolved in sodium hydroxide solution.
The solution can be reduced using zinc and an acid -
either hydrochloric acid or sulphuric acid, usually using moderately
concentrated acid.
The exact vanadium ion present in the solution is very
complicated, and varies with the pH of the solution. The reaction is done
under acidic conditions when the main ion present is VO2+
- called the dioxovanadium(V) ion.
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Note: The ion is usually written as VO2+,
but is more accurately [VO2(H2O)4]+.
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If you do the reaction in a small flask, it is normally
stoppered with some cotton wool. This allows hydrogen (produced from a side
reaction between the zinc and acid) to escape. At the same time it stops much
air from entering. This prevents re-oxidation of the lower oxidation states
of vanadium (particularly the +2 state) by oxygen in the air.
The reaction is usually warmed so that the changes happen
in a reasonable time.
The reduction is shown in two stages. Some individual
important colours are shown, but the process is one continuous change from
start to finish.
The reduction from +5 to +4
It is important to notice that the green colour you see
isn't actually another oxidation state. it is just a mixture of the original
yellow of the +5 state and the blue of the +4.
Be very careful with the formulae of the two vanadium ions
- they are very easy to confuse!
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Note: Just like the VO2+
ion, the VO2+ ion will have water molecules attached to it as well
- [VO(H2O)5]2+. We usually use the simpler
form.
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The reduction from +4 to +2
The colour changes just continue.
The reason for the inverted commas around the
vanadium(III) ion is that this is almost certainly a simplification. The
exact nature of the complex ion will depend on which acid you use in the
reduction process. The simplification is probably reasonable at this level.
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Note: If you use hydrochloric acid, you get a
ligand exchange reaction to give [V(H2O)4Cl2]+.
This causes the green colour in the vanadium(III) solution.
I am uncertain about the sulphuric acid case. One source
says that with sulphuric acid, you actually get the [V(H2O)6]3+
ion which is a dull grey-blue colour. However, when I checked this in the lab
before writing this, I got exactly the same green colour with both
acids.
One possibility is that you get another ligand exchange
reaction with sulphate ions to give [V(H2O)5(SO4)]+,
but I haven't been able to confirm this.
There is, however, a very similar case in chromium
chemistry which is discussed on the page about ligand
exchange reactions.
If you follow this link, use the BACK button on your
browser to return to this page.
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Re-oxidation of the vanadium(II)
The vanadium(II) ion is very easily oxidised. If you
remove the cotton wool from the flask and pour some solution into a test
tube, it turns green because of its contact with oxygen in the air. It is
oxidised back to vanadium(III).
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Note: It only changes this quickly if the
solution is still warm. In the cold, the change is quite a lot slower.
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If it is allowed to stand for a long time, the solution
eventually turns blue as the air oxidises it back to the vanadium(IV) state -
VO2+ ions.
Adding nitric acid (a reasonably powerful oxidising agent)
to the original vanadium(II) solution also produces blue VO2+
ions. The vanadium(II) is again oxidised back to vanadium(IV).
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Important! There is no point in reading the
rest of this page unless you are familiar with redox
potentials (electrode potentials).
This link will take you to a page explaining how to use
redox potentials in the present context. However, you should be aware that it
is the final page in a linked sequence. That page will give you the
opportunity to start at the beginning if you need to. You would be strongly
advised to do that unless you are really confident! It will take you some
time, but at the end you should really understand how to use redox
potentials.
If you think you know about E° values, it would probably
be quicker to read the rest of this current page and then come back to this
link if you need to.
If you follow this link, use the BACK button on your
browser (or the History file or the Go menu) to return quickly to this page.
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Explaining the changes in terms of redox potentials
(electrode potentials)
Using zinc as the reducing agent
The first stage of the series of reductions
Let's look at the first stage of the reduction - from VO2+
to VO2+. The redox potential for the vanadium half-reaction is
given by:
The corresponding equilibrium for the zinc is:
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Note: If you have learnt to use E° values
using some more complicated method (and there are lots of unnecessarily
complicated methods around!), it would pay you to follow the link above to
find out how to do it all much more easily.
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So . . . if you mix together zinc and VO2+
ions in the presence of acid to provide the H+ ions:
That converts the two equilibria into two one-way
reactions. You can write these down and combine them to give the ionic
equation for the reaction if you want to.
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Note: If you aren't happy about building
up ionic equations like this, you could usefully follow this link.
Use the BACK button on your browser to return quickly to
this page.
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The other stages of the reaction
Here are the E° values for all the steps of the reduction
from vanadium(V) to vanadium(II):
. . . and here is the zinc value again:
Remember that for the vanadium reactions to move to the
right (which is what we want), their E° values must be more positive than
whatever you are reacting them with.
In other words, for the reactions to work, zinc must
always have the more negative value - and that's the case.
Zinc can reduce the vanadium through each of these steps
to give the vanadium(II) ion.
Using other reducing agents
Suppose you replaced zinc as the reducing agent by tin.
How far would the set of reductions go this time?
Here are the E° values again:
. . . and here is the tin value:
In order for each reduction to happen, the vanadium
reaction has to have the more positive E° value because we want it to go to
the right. That means that the tin must have the more negative value.
In the first vanadium equation (from +5 to +4), the tin
value is more negative. That works OK.
In the second vanadium equation (from +4 to +3), the tin
value is again the more negative. That works as well.
But in the final vanadium reaction (from +3 to +2), tin no
longer has the more negative E° value. Tin won't reduce vanadium(III) to
vanadium(II).
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Important! If this doesn't seem pretty
obvious to you, then you don't really understand about redox
potentials.
This link will take you to the redox potential menu. Spend
some time by starting at the beginning of the sequence of pages you will find
there.
If you follow this link, use the BACK button on your
browser (or the History file or the Go menu) if you want to return to this
page later.
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Re-oxidation of the vanadium(II)
The vanadium(II) oxidation state is easily oxidised back
to vanadium(III) - or even higher.
Oxidation by hydrogen ions
You will remember that the original reduction we talked
about was carried out using zinc and an acid in a flask stoppered with a
piece of cotton wool to keep the air out. Air will rapidly oxidise the
vanadium(II) ions - but so also will the hydrogen ions present in the
solution!
The vanadium(II) solution is only stable as long as you
keep the air out, and in the presence of the zinc. The zinc is necessary to
keep the vanadium reduced.
What happens if the zinc isn't there? Look at these E°
values:
The reaction with the more negative E° value goes to the
left; the reaction with the more positive (or less negative) one to the
right.
That means that the vanadium(II) ions will be oxidised to
vanadium(III) ions, and the hydrogen ions reduced to hydrogen.
Will the oxidation go any further - for example, to the
vanadium(IV) state?
Have a look at the E° values and decide:
In order for the vanadium equilibrium to move to the left,
it would have to have the more negative E° value. It hasn't got the
more negative E° value and so the reaction doesn't happen.
Oxidation by nitric acid
In a similar sort of way, you can work out how far nitric
acid will oxidise the vanadium(II).
Here's the first step:
The vanadium reaction has the more negative E° value and
so will move to the left; the nitric acid reaction moves to the right.
Nitric acid will oxidise vanadium(II) to vanadium(III).
The second stage involves these E° values:
The nitric acid again has the more positive E° value and
so moves to the right. The more negative (less positive) vanadium reaction
moves to the left.
Nitric acid will certainly oxidise vanadium(III) to
vanadium(IV).
Will it go all the way to vanadium(V)?
No, it won't! For the vanadium reaction to move to the
left to form the dioxovanadium(V) ion, it would have to have the more
negative (less positive) E° value. It hasn't got a less positive value, and
so the reaction doesn't happen.
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Note: There are several possible
half-reactions involving the nitric acid with a variety of E° values. Two of
these actually have E° values more positive than +1.00 and so, in principle,
nitric acid could seem to be able to oxidise vanadium(IV) to vanadium(V) - but
involving different products from the nitric acid.
In practice, if you do this reaction in the lab, the
solution turns blue - producing the vanadium(IV) state. Just because the E°
values tell you that a reaction is possible, you can't assume that it will
actually happen. There may be very large activation energy barriers involved,
causing the reaction to be infinitely slow!
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You can work out the effect of any other oxidising agent
on the lower oxidation states of vanadium in exactly the same way. But don't
assume that because the E° values show that a reaction is possible, it
will necessarily happen.
Where would you like to go now?
© Jim Clark 2003
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