I think I kinda understand it more now. However, I was thinking of the reaction SO3+H2O H2SO4
Determine the
oxidation numbers for each atom on each side of the arrow. Compare the results on each side. If there is a change, it is a redox reaction.
Example:
C + O
2 CO
2C: 0 on the left; +4 on the right
O: 0 on the left; -2 on the right
Conclusion: This is a redox reaction; C is oxidised and O is reduced
Example:
NaHCO
3 + HCl
CO
2 + H
2O + NaCl
Na: +1 left; +1 right
H: +1 left (in bicarbonate) and +1 left (in HCl); +1 right
C: +4 left; +4 right
O: -2 left; -2 right (in CO
2) and -2 right (in water)
Cl: -1 left; -1 right
Conclusion: No change in oxidation states, therefore not a redox reaction.
Try playing the same game with the reaction of sulfur trioxide and water you posted. Is it a redox reaction?