Metal | Ion | Reactivity | Extraction | |
---|---|---|---|---|
K | K+ | react with water | electrolysis | |
Na | Na+ | |||
Li | Li+ | |||
Sr | Sr2+ | |||
Ca | Ca2+ | |||
Mg | Mg2+ | react with acids | ||
Al | Al3+ | |||
C | included for comparison | |||
Zn | Zn2+ | react with acids | smelting with coke | |
Cr | Cr2+ | |||
Fe | Fe2+ | |||
Cd | Cd2+ | |||
Co | Co2+ | |||
Ni | Ni2+ | |||
Sn | Sn2+ | |||
Pb | Pb2+ | |||
H2 | H+ | included for comparison | ||
Cu | Cu2+ | highly unreactive | heat or physical extraction | |
Ag | Ag+ | |||
Hg | Hg2+ | |||
Au | Au3+ | |||
Pt | Pt2+ |
Going from bottom to top, the metals:
- increase in reactivity;
- lose electrons more readily to form positive ions;
- corrode or tarnish more readily;
- require more energy (and different methods) to be separated from their ores[citation needed];
- become stronger reducing agents.
Defining reactions
There is no unique and fully consistent way to define the reactivity series, but it is common to use the three types of reaction listed below, many of which can be performed in a high-school laboratory (at least as demonstrations).Reaction with water and acids
The most reactive metals (for example, sodium) will react with cold water to produce hydrogen and the metal hydroxide:Metals in the middle of the reactivity series (for example, iron) will react with acids, but not water, to give hydrogen and a metal salt:
There is some ambiguity at the borderlines between the groups. Magnesium, aluminium and zinc can react with water, but the reaction is usually very slow unless the metal samples are specially prepared to remove the surface layer of oxide which protects the rest of the metal. Copper and silver will react with nitric acid, but not by the simple equation shown for iron.
Single displacement reactions
An iron nail placed in a solution of copper sulfate will quickly change colour as metallic copper is deposited. The iron is converted into iron(II) sulfate:In general, a metal can displace any of the metals which are lower in the reactivity series: the higher metal reduces the ions of the lower metal. This is used in the thermite reaction for preparing small quantities of metallic iron, and in the Kroll process for preparing titanium (Ti comes at about the same level as Al in the reactivity series).
However, other factors can come into play, as in the preparation of metallic potassium by the reduction of potassium chloride with sodium at 850 ºC: although sodium is lower than potassium in the reactivity series, the reaction can proceed because potassium is more volatile, and is preferentially distilled off from the mixture.
Comparison with standard electrode potentials
The reactivity series is sometimes quoted in the strict reverse order of standard electrode potentials, when it is also known as the "electrochemical series":- Li > K > Sr > Ca > Na > Mg > Al > Zn > Cr > Fe > Cd > Co > Ni > Sn > Pb > H > Cu > Ag > Hg > Pt > Au
Standard electrode potentials offer a quantitative measure of the power of a reducing agent, rather than the qualitative considerations of other reactivity series. However, they are only valid for standard conditions: in particular, they only apply to reactions in aqueous solution. Even with this proviso, the electrode potentials of lithium and sodium – and hence their positions in the electrochemical series – appear anomalous. The order of reactivity, as shown by the vigour of the reaction with water or the speed at which the metal surface tarnishes in air, appears to be
- potassium > sodium > lithium > alkaline earth metals,
Anomalous electrode potential of lithium
The standard electrode potential of a reaction EM = | Li | Na | K |
---|---|---|---|
ΔatH | +162 | +110 | +90 |
Ei / kJ mol−1 | +520 | +496 | +419 |
ΔhydrH | –960 | –846 | –761 |
ΔfH | –278 | –240 | –252 |
ΔfS | +51 | +73 | +104 |
ΔfG | –293 | –261 | –283 |
E | +3.04 | +2.71 | +2.93 |
Sources: Jolly (1991),[5] Greenwood & Earnshaw (1984).[4][6] |
The high electrode potential of the Li/Li+ couple can be seen to be entirely due to the unusually large enthalpy change of hydration of the gaseous Li+ ion, which overrides the other three factors. The lithium ion is small and highly polarising, and so binds the coordinated water molecules very tightly. This can also be seen in the relatively low positive entropy change for the formation of Li+(aq): the presence of lithium ions in solution creates more order in the solvent (water) than for either sodium or potassium ions.
The reaction of metallic lithium with water is more exothermic than any other alkali metal (many times more exothermic for a given mass or volume), but it is less vigorous for kinetic reasons. The enthalpy change of atomisation is twice as high for lithium than for potassium, indicating stronger bonding in the metal (both metals have the same body-centered cubic structure).