Redox Reactions MCQs | First 100 Questions | 11-Chemistry
GKaim: Measure. Improve. Achieve.

Redox Reactions MCQs with Answers – Part 1 (Class 11 Chemistry)

Timer: Off
Random: Off

11. Rusting of iron is commonly introduced as an oxidation process because iron:
ⓐ. changes into a liquid
ⓑ. loses its metallic colour only
ⓒ. separates from oxygen to form pure metal
ⓓ. combines with oxygen in moist air
12. The entry that needs repair in the classical redox table is:
RowChange describedClassical label
PAddition of oxygenOxidation
QRemoval of hydrogenOxidation
RRemoval of oxygenReduction
SAddition of oxygenReduction
ⓐ. Row S
ⓑ. Row P
ⓒ. Row Q
ⓓ. Row R
13. Which statements follow the classical redox orientation? I. Addition of oxygen to a substance can be called oxidation. II. Removal of oxygen from a substance can be called reduction. III. A reaction without oxygen or hydrogen can never be redox.
ⓐ. I only
ⓑ. II and III only
ⓒ. I, II and III
ⓓ. I and II only
14. In \( \mathrm{PbO + C \rightarrow Pb + CO} \), carbon changes into \( \mathrm{CO} \). Under the oxygen-transfer view, carbon is:
ⓐ. oxidised because it gains oxygen
ⓑ. reduced because it gains oxygen
ⓒ. reduced because \( \mathrm{PbO} \) contains oxygen
ⓓ. unchanged because carbon remains carbon
15. In older oxygen-hydrogen language, removal of hydrogen from a compound is classified as ______.
ⓐ. reduction
ⓑ. oxidation
ⓒ. hydrolysis
ⓓ. neutralisation
16. Read the reaction note below.
Black \( \mathrm{CuO} \) is heated in a stream of dry \( \mathrm{H_2} \). A reddish-brown solid \( \mathrm{Cu} \) forms, and water droplets are observed in the cooler part of the tube.
The best interpretation of the note is:
ⓐ. \( \mathrm{CuO} \) is oxidised and \( \mathrm{H_2} \) is reduced
ⓑ. both \( \mathrm{CuO} \) and \( \mathrm{H_2} \) are reduced
ⓒ. \( \mathrm{CuO} \) is reduced and \( \mathrm{H_2} \) is oxidised
ⓓ. no redox change occurs because copper is a metal
17. A notebook pairs some changes with classical labels. The unsupported pairing is:
RowChangeLabel
P\( \mathrm{Mg \rightarrow MgO} \)Oxidation
Q\( \mathrm{CuO \rightarrow Cu} \)Reduction
RLoss of hydrogen from a substanceOxidation
SAddition of hydrogen to a substanceOxidation
ⓐ. Row P
ⓑ. Row S
ⓒ. Row Q
ⓓ. Row R
18. Use the arrangement described below.
A clean zinc strip is dipped into blue \( \mathrm{CuSO_4} \) solution. After some time, a reddish-brown deposit appears on the strip, and the blue colour fades.
Why does the older oxygen-hydrogen definition feel insufficient for this reaction?
ⓐ. The reaction has no visible observation
ⓑ. The reaction occurs only because water evaporates
ⓒ. The change must be neutralisation because \( \mathrm{CuSO_4} \) is a salt
ⓓ. The change is redox, not an old oxygen-hydrogen case
19. A reaction record says that substance \( \mathrm{P} \) gains oxygen while substance \( \mathrm{Q} \) loses oxygen in the same reaction. The record should be read as:
ⓐ. \( \mathrm{P} \) is reduced and \( \mathrm{Q} \) is oxidised
ⓑ. both \( \mathrm{P} \) and \( \mathrm{Q} \) are oxidised
ⓒ. \( \mathrm{P} \) is oxidised and \( \mathrm{Q} \) is reduced
ⓓ. both \( \mathrm{P} \) and \( \mathrm{Q} \) are reduced
20. The first limitation of defining oxidation only as oxygen addition is that this definition:
ⓐ. cannot explain combustion of carbon
ⓑ. makes oxide formation impossible to classify
ⓒ. does not cover many displacement reactions
ⓓ. removes the need to study reduction
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Scroll to Top