This MCQ module is based on: Reactivity Series and Ionic Compounds
Reactivity Series and Ionic Compounds
3.2.5 The Reactivity (Activity) Series
Based on the observed reactions of metals with water, acids and salt solutions (Part 1), chemists have arranged metals in a vertical list called the reactivity (activity) series. The metal at the top loses electrons most easily; the one at the bottom the least.
| Metal(s) | Reacts with cold H2O? | Reacts with dilute HCl? |
|---|---|---|
| K, Na, Ca | Yes — vigorously | Yes — explosive/dangerous |
| Mg | Only hot water | Yes |
| Al, Zn, Fe | Only steam | Yes |
| Cu, Hg, Ag, Au, Pt | No | No |
3.3 How Do Metals and Non-metals React?
The noble gases (Ne, Ar, Kr...) are famously unreactive because their outermost shells are already full (8 electrons — the octet). All other atoms attempt to achieve such a stable noble gas configuration. They can do this either by losing or gaining electrons.
Metals Lose Electrons — Cations
Metals have 1, 2 or 3 electrons in their outermost shell. It is energetically easier to lose them:
Non-metals Gain Electrons — Anions
Non-metals have 5, 6 or 7 electrons in their outermost shell. It is easier to gain a few to complete the octet:
More Examples
The NaCl Crystal Lattice
In solid NaCl, each Na+ ion is surrounded by six Cl− ions and each Cl− by six Na+ ions in a giant, orderly cubic lattice. There are no discrete "NaCl molecules" — the formula merely gives the smallest ratio.
3.3.1 Properties of Ionic Compounds
| Property | Reason |
|---|---|
| Hard crystalline solids, brittle | Strong electrostatic forces arrange ions in a rigid lattice. When layers slide, like charges repel, cracking the crystal. |
| High melting and boiling points | Large amount of energy needed to overcome strong interionic forces. |
| Soluble in water, insoluble in kerosene/petrol | Polar water molecules can separate and surround the ions; non-polar solvents cannot. |
| Conduct electricity when molten or dissolved, NOT as solid | Ions are locked in the lattice in the solid state. On melting or dissolution they become free to move, carrying charge. |
- Take a few NaCl crystals and attempt to light a bulb with them between two electrodes.
- Now dissolve the NaCl in water and repeat.
- Try placing the crystals between the electrodes again after melting at about 800°C.
Worked Examples
Solution: Na has configuration 2,8,1 and Cl has 2,8,7. Na donates its single outer electron to Cl:
Na+ [ :Cl̤̇: ]− (Cl now has 8 dots)
Solution: Al forms Al3+, O forms O2−. Cross the charges: 2 Al3+ and 3 O2−. Formula: Al2O3.
Solution:
Solution: The strong electrostatic attraction between Na+ and Cl− holds the lattice together tightly (hardness). If a force shifts one layer by a half-unit, similar charges now face each other and repel strongly — the crystal cleaves (brittleness).
Solution: In the solid lattice, K+ and Cl− are held in fixed positions. In the molten state the lattice breaks down and ions become mobile; they drift towards the oppositely charged electrodes, carrying current.
Solution: Ionic compounds (e.g., NaCl, 801°C) have much higher MPs than simple covalent compounds (e.g., naphthalene, 80°C) because more energy is needed to break the strong ionic lattice. Ionic compounds dissolve readily in polar solvents (water) and are insoluble in non-polar solvents (kerosene); covalent compounds usually show the reverse.
Solution: Mg forms Mg2+; N forms N3−. To balance charges, take 3 Mg2+ (+6) and 2 N3− (−6). Formula: Mg3N2.
Interactive: Ionic Compound Builder L3 Apply
Pick a metal cation and a non-metal anion. The tool will balance the charges and print the formula.
Competency-Based Questions
Q1. L4 Analyse Arrange W, X, Y, Z in decreasing order of reactivity. (1 mark)
Q2. L2 Understand Which metal(s) could Z plausibly be? (1 mark)
Q3. L3 Apply Show with electron dot structures the formation of MgCl2. (3 marks)
Q4. L4 Analyse Ionic solids do not conduct electricity but ionic solutions do. Explain. (2 marks)
Q5. L5 Evaluate Which would have a higher melting point, NaCl or MgO? Justify. (2 marks)
Assertion-Reason Questions
Assertion (A): Ionic compounds are brittle.
Reason (R): When a layer slides, like charges come adjacent and repel, cracking the crystal.
Assertion (A): Sodium chloride is soluble in kerosene.
Reason (R): Ionic compounds are soluble only in polar solvents like water.
Assertion (A): Copper lies below hydrogen in the reactivity series.
Reason (R): Copper cannot displace H2 from dilute HCl.