QUESTION IMAGE
Question
select the correct answer.
in the covalently bonded chemical compound acetate ch₃coo⁻, the two carbon atoms have different oxidation states. what are its two oxidation states?
diagram of acetate structure: a bracket with two carbon atoms, one bonded to three h and one c, the other bonded to c, o, and o⁻
a. +1 and -2
b. +3 and -4
c. +3 and -3
d. +1 and -4
Step1: Analyze the first carbon (in $-CH_3$)
In the methyl group ($-CH_3$), each H has an oxidation state of +1. Let the oxidation state of C be $x$. The sum of oxidation states in a neutral group (here, the methyl group is part of the ion, but we consider the group's charge contribution). For $-CH_3$: $x + 3(+1)=0$ (since the methyl group is attached to the carbonyl carbon, and the overall charge of the ion is -1, but for the methyl C, we calculate its oxidation state considering its bonds). Wait, actually, in the acetate ion $[CH_3COO]^-$, let's label the two carbons: $C_1$ (in $CH_3$) and $C_2$ (in $COO$).
For $C_1$ (bonded to 3 H and 1 C): The oxidation state of H is +1, C - C bond is between two C atoms (same element, so oxidation state contribution 0). So for $C_1$: $x + 3(+1)+0 = 0$ (since the $CH_3$ group is neutral in terms of its internal charge before considering the rest? Wait, no, the overall ion is $-1$. Let's use the rule: oxidation state of O is -2 (in $COO$ part, except maybe in peroxides, but here it's a carboxylate), H is +1.
For $C_2$ (in $COO$): bonded to 1 C, 2 O (one double bond, one single bond). Let oxidation state of $C_2$ be $y$. The single-bonded O has -2, double-bonded O also has -2 (since in a double bond, each O contributes -2? Wait, oxidation state for O in most cases is -2. The charge of the ion is -1. Let's calculate the oxidation state of each C.
First, $C_1$ (methyl C): bonded to 3 H (+1 each) and 1 C (oxidation state 0 for the C - C bond). So the oxidation state of $C_1$: $x + 3(+1) + 0 = 0$ (since the $CH_3$ group is attached to $C_2$, and we can consider the oxidation state of $C_1$ by its bonds. Wait, actually, the formula is: sum of oxidation states in a compound/ion equals its charge. For the acetate ion $[CH_3COO]^-$, charge is -1.
Let's denote:
- Oxidation state of $C_1$ (CH₃ - C) as $x$
- Oxidation state of $C_2$ (C - COO⁻) as $y$
- H: +1 (3 H atoms)
- O: -2 (2 O atoms in COO⁻, one with a single bond, one with a double bond, but oxidation state of O is -2 in both cases)
- The ion has a charge of -1.
So the sum of oxidation states:
For $C_1$: bonded to 3 H (+1) and 1 C (y). So $x + 3(+1) + y =$? Wait, no, the entire ion:
Atoms: 2 C, 3 H, 2 O, charge -1.
Sum of oxidation states: $2x' + 3(+1) + 2(-2) = -1$, where $x'$ is the average, but we need individual. Wait, no, the two C atoms have different oxidation states, so we need to calculate each.
For $C_1$ (CH₃ - C):
Bonds: 3 H (each +1) and 1 C (C - C bond, so oxidation state contribution 0 from the C - C bond, since same element). So the oxidation state of $C_1$: $x + 3(+1) + 0 = 0$ (because the CH₃ group is a neutral fragment? No, better way: in organic compounds, for a C atom, oxidation state can be calculated by considering the electronegativity of bonded atoms. H is less electronegative than C, so C gets -1 for each H? Wait, no, standard rule: oxidation state of H is +1 (except in hydrides), O is -2 (except in peroxides, superoxides), F is -1, etc. For a C atom bonded to H and C:
- Each H bonded to C: C has -1 (since H is +1, so to balance, C is -1 per H? Wait, no, let's use the formula for oxidation state:
Oxidation state of an atom = (number of bonds to more electronegative atoms) - (number of bonds to less electronegative atoms)
For $C_1$ (CH₃ - C):
- Bonds to H (3): H is less electronegative than C, so each H gives C -1 (since C is more electronegative, so when C bonds to H, C "gains" an electron, so oxidation state -1 per H? Wait, no, oxidation state is the charge an atom would have if all bonds are ionic. So for a…
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C. +3 and -3