When balancing redox equations, I'm confused about how to figure out how many electrons to add.
In a problem like MnO
4-+I
- MnO
2+I
2, I know it would split into
I
I
2 and MnO
4 MnO
2And after balancing the equation, you would get:
2I
- I
2+2e
-MnO
4-+4H
++3e
- MnO
2+2H
2O
Except in Br
2 BrO
3-+Br
- (in basic solution)
I don't understand how to solve this type of problem and why it is solved the way it is.
What I had done is the following:
Br
2 2Br
-Br
2+6H
2O
2BrO
3-+12H
+At the end, I would convert the H
+ and OH
-, which I will add, into H
2O and cancel.
Except I was apparently wrong with what I had done and should have gotten an answer of:
Br
2 2BrO
3-+10e
-Why are we adding 10 electrons to the right side instead of the left?
I thought that adding electrons was supposed to correct the charge imbalance? So wouldn't 2 electrons be added to Br
2?
I don't understand why in the second case, the added number of electrons is based off of the oxidation number instead of the charge?
Can someone explain the difference to me because I'm so confused.