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Disproportionation or dismutation is a type of reaction in redox chemistry in which a reactant is both oxidised and reduced in the same chemical reaction forming 2 separate compounds.

Examples


The ionic equation for this reaction is as follows:

3Cl2 + 6OH → 5Cl + ClO3 + 3H2O

In the above equation, the initial oxidation number of chlorine is 0.

In the products, Cl has an oxidation number of −1, having been reduced, whereas the oxidation number of chlorine in the chlorate ion is +5, indicating that it has been oxidised. It should be noted that there is no change of oxidation state for the sodium ion.

H2O2 + Fe(III)-E → H2O + O=Fe(IV)-E (oxidation of Fe(III) to Fe(IV))

H2O2 + O=Fe(IV)-E → H2O + Fe(III)-E + O2 (reduction of Fe(IV) back to Fe(III))

(Where Fe-E represents the iron centre of the heme group attached to the enzyme.)

  • C4H4 reacts with itself to form C6H6 and C2H2.

2C4H4 → C6H6 + C2H2

Disproportionation is the opposite of synproportionation.

External link


Chemical reactions | Chemical processes | Disproportionierung | Dismutación | Dismutation

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Disproportionation".

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