This last reaction you have posted is for a basic solution. Therefore, "technically" you are supposed to use OH
- and H
2O to balance and not H
+ at all (I say technically because I am far too lazy to do it that way, and so I about to show you a trick one of my favorite professors taught me
).
I will show you how to modify your method slightly to balance basic (OH
-) equations after doing the acidic (H
+) balance steps to start off.
Start off with the two half reactions:
Cl
2 Cl
-Cl
2 ClO
3-Note that OH
- or H
+ and H
2O do not show up in the half reactions yet (just as H
+ and H
2O did not show up in the half reactions of your first example). And yes, you can have one chemical species being oxidized and reduced in the same reaction (in the first equation chlorine is reduced, in the second it is oxidized).
2. Balance using H
2O, H
+, and e
- as before (ignore OH
- for now).
2e
- + Cl
2 2 Cl
-6H
2O + Cl
2 2ClO
3- + 12 H
+ + 10e
-3. Multiply everything in the top equation by 5 so that the electrons in both equations cancel (should be 10e
- on both sides so that they cancel exactly), and then add the two equations together to get:
6 H
2O + 6Cl
2 2ClO
3- + 10Cl
- + 12H
+ Now, if the question had given this as an acidic solution (H
+ and H
2O as the two species) you would be finished. But it gave you a basic solution (OH
- and H
2O as the two species), so you have to add in two more steps to convert your acidic answer to a basic one: 1) Neutralize the acid by adding OH
- to both sides of the equation. 2) Cancel waters. For the above example, here is how you do it:
Add OH
- to both sides in an amount to cancel the excess acid:
+ 12OH- + 6H
2O + 6Cl
2 2ClO
3- + 10Cl
- +
12H+ + 12OH-Neutralize the acid with the base on the right side to make water:
+ 12OH- +
6H2O + 6Cl
2 2ClO
3- + 10Cl
- +
12H2OCancel the waters to get the answer for a basic solution:
12OH
- + 6Cl
2 2ClO
3- + 10Cl
- + 6H
2O
Finally check the charges on both sides to see that they match (-12 on the left, -12 on the right, should be good).