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I had some trouble balancing these using the "ion electron method", ordinarily I'd balance the half reactions (excluding H and O), add H20 to compensate for O, H+ to compensate for H, and electrons to compensate for charge.
P4(s) + NO3-(aq) ---> H2PO4-(aq) + NO(g) (in an acidic solution)
2CuS(s) + HNO3 --> Cu(NO3)2 + H20 + NO (g) + S (in an acidic solution)
ClO2(aq) + OH-(aq) + ---> ClO3-(aq) + Cl-(aq) + H2O(l) (in a basic solution)
1) how should the half reactions of these chemical equations look ?
2) aren't all types of chemical reactions also redox-reactions(chemical reactions in which a transfer of electrons occur) ?
P4(s) + NO3-(aq) ---> H2PO4-(aq) + NO(g) (in an acidic solution)
2CuS(s) + HNO3 --> Cu(NO3)2 + H20 + NO (g) + S (in an acidic solution)
ClO2(aq) + OH-(aq) + ---> ClO3-(aq) + Cl-(aq) + H2O(l) (in a basic solution)
1) how should the half reactions of these chemical equations look ?
2) aren't all types of chemical reactions also redox-reactions(chemical reactions in which a transfer of electrons occur) ?
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