While sulphur dioxide and hydrogen peroxide can act as oxidising as well as reducing agents in their reactions,

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asked Oct 9, 2017 in Chemistry by jisu zahaan (28,760 points) 28 438 1099

While sulphur dioxide and hydrogen peroxide can act as oxidising as well as reducing agents in their reactions, ozone and nitric acid act only as oxidants. Why? 

1 Answer

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answered Oct 9, 2017 by sforrest072 (157,439 points) 63 451 1294
selected Mar 1, 2018 by sanjeev
 
Best answer

In sulphur dioxide (SO2), the oxidation number (O.N.) of S is +4 and the range of the O.N. that S can have is from +6 to –2. 

Therefore, SO2 can act as an oxidising as well as a reducing agent. 

In hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), the O.N. of O is –1 and the range of the O.N. that O can have is from 0 to –2. O can sometimes also attain the oxidation numbers +1 and +2. 

Hence, H2O2 can act as an oxidising as well as a reducing agent. In ozone (O3), the O.N. of O is zero and the range of the O.N. that O can have is from 0 to –2. Therefore, the O.N. of O can only decrease in this case. Hence, O3 acts only as an oxidant. 

In nitric acid (HNO3), the O.N. of N is +5 and the range of the O.N. that N can have is from +5 to –3. Therefore, the O.N. of N can only decrease in this case. Hence, HNO3 acts only as an oxidant. 

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