Consider 3 oxidizing agents:
Pyridinium chlorochromate (C5H6NCrO3Cl)
Sodium dichromate (Na2Cr2O7)
Chromium trioxide (CrO3)
They are listed in increasing order of oxidizing strength.
Oxidizing strength is defined as the compound's ability to oxidize an alcohol. Stronger oxidizing agents oxidize primary alcohols to carboxylic acids, whereas weaker ones oxidize primary alcohols to aldehydes.
I've been thinking about this for a couple of hours but can't come up with anything satisfactory. I also haven't been able to find anything online/in textbooks.
I have developed a theory for the case when the same central metal atom exists in the compared oxidizing agents.
The more bonds connect the central metal atom to electronegative atoms, the more will the metal atom's electrons be withdrawn by induction, and the more electropositive (and therefore better at being an oxidizing agent) the central atom will be.
If an electronegative atom that is bonded to the central metal atom has a negative charge or is bonded to another electropositive atom, then the inductive withdrawal of electrons will be lessened, making the metal atom a poorer oxidizing agent.
CrO3 (strongest oxidizing agent)
http://chemicalland21.com/industrialchem/inorganic/1333-82-0.gifIt has 6 bonds to oxygens, none of which are negatively charged or bonded to electropositive atoms.
K2Cr2O7http://www.chemyq.com/xz/img/img7/7778-50-9.gif6 bonds to oxygens, but one of the oxygens has a negative charge (so it will not withdraw electrons as much from the chromium)
PCC (weakest oxidizing agent)
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/91/Pyridinium_chlorochromate.PNG5 bonds to oxygens, and one of the oxygens has a negative charge (so it will not withdraw electrons as much from the chromium)
1 bond to a chlorine, which is less electronegative than oxygen, so it will not withdraw electrons from the chromium as much as the 6th oxygen in potassium dichromate