Group 7 Part 1 Edexcel
Group 7 Part 1 Edexcel
It is important to note that this topic can be split into halogens and halide ions.
students often wrongly interchange halogens and halides. Please remember that halogens and
halides are not the same thing and that they react very differently.
halogens are diatomic elements e.g. F2, Cl2 halide ions e.g., F-, Cl-
Halogens
States
Halogens exist in different physical states:
F2 is a yellow gas
I2 is a grey solid
At2 is at the bottom of group 7. It is also a solid but hardly ever gets mentioned.
Boiling Points
You can also see how the boiling point varies down the group from their states. The gases are at the top
(lowest boiling point) versus solids at the bottom (highest boiling points).
This is simply to do with bigger molecules at the bottom of the group having more London forces that
need to be broken when boiling.
Colours in solution
Halogens are not very soluble in water. They are non-polar molecules and water is a very polar solvent.
They dont like each other.
But halogens will dissolve happily in non-polar organic covalent solvents like hexane as they can form
London forces with hexane.
In Hexane In Water
Chlorine colourless colourless
Bromine orange red
Iodine brown violet
Reactivity
Halogens become less reactive as you go down a group: F2 > Cl2 > Br2 > I2 > At2
For example, fluorine has electronic configuration 1s2 2s2 2p5. When fluorine reacts it will become F-. This
means it needs to gain one electron to fill its outer shell to form the F- ion and become 2p6.
The reactivity of the halogens is determined by how easily they can attract an electron.
The smaller the atomic radius, then the more this extra electron will feel the attractive force of the
nucleus and the easier it will be to form the halide ion.
As fluorine is the halogen with the smallest radius, it is therefore the most reactive.
slightly off topic but you can reverse this theory for Group 1 or 2. Metal ions are trying to lose
electrons and therefore the larger they are, the easier it is to do it. Hence why reactivity increases
down Group 1 or 2.
Halogen Reactions
Oxidation/Displacement
A common reaction to demonstrate the differences in reactivity is to react a halogen with a metal halide
(see examples below).
For example:
F2 + KCl Cl2 + KF
As Cl2 is below F2 in the group then the Cl- ion will be oxidised/displaced. F2 is oxidising/displacing Cl- to
form Cl2 and F-.
Cl2 + KF no reaction
As F2 is above Cl2 in Group 7, then Cl2 is not a powerful enough oxidising agent to oxidise the F- ion.
These reactions are of course accompanied by colour changes, so the table we looked at earlier will be
useful.
Disproportionation
A disproportionation reaction is where a species is both oxidised and reduced at the same time. Yes this
is possible! You wont see this reaction very often other than in Group 7 questions.
For oxidation and reduction to happen at the same time, we have to do something like this:
They could ask this for any halogen but its usually Cl2, as they need the Cl part to make the bleach:
NaClO contains the Cl+ ion and NaCl, the Cl- ion. The ClO- ion is called the hypochlorate ion and is
responsible for killing bacteria.
We know that, for example, they add chlorine to swimming pools to kill bacteria. As above, this is due to
the formation of the ClO- ion, which occurs in 2 steps: