I get the metal replacement thing. I understand why this happens. The only thing I think I am unclear of is if the order of the elements/compound in the equation matter. It does right? Because in the first example if it was silver dipped into chromium nitrate (I don't even know if there is a chromium nitrate but just as an example) then there would be no reaction right because silver is not as reactive as chromium and therefore would not replace the chromium ions. I hope that makes sense.
Right, you have to identify the oxidizing agent (the one gaining electrons) and the reducing agent (the one losing electrons).
Using geodome's example:
Fe + 2AgNO
3 => Fe(NO3)
2 + 2Ag
Iron metal has an initial charge of 0, but becomes Fe
2+ (thus losing two electrons). It is the reducing agent.
Silver begins as Ag
+ ion in solution, becomes Ag metal with neutral charge (thus gaining 1 electron). It is the oxidizing agent.
What you have in your activity series is the "relative strengths" of oxidizing agents. Ag is "higher" than Fe in the activity series, which means it is a stronger oxidizing agent, which means it can take electrons away from Fe. And it does, since it goes from Ag
+ + e
- --> Ag(s), and Iron goes from Fe -> Fe2
+ + e
-Just to add RE: The Order... If the rxn was instead Ag + Fe(NO
3)
2 => NR, there would be no rxn because the oxidizing agent Fe
2+ is "lower" than Ag on the chart and so is not strong enough to pull electrons away, therefore NR.