Disproportionation or dismutation is used to describe two particular types of chemical reaction:[1]
A chemical reaction of the type: 2A → A' + A" where A, A' and A" are different chemical species. While the most common type is a redox reaction, other types are possible. For example: 2H2O → H3O+ + OH- is a disproportionation but is not a redox reaction.
A chemical reaction in which an element is simultaneously reduced and oxidized so as to form two different products.
The first disproportionation reaction to be studied in detail was:
2 Sn2+ → Sn + Sn4+
This was examined using tartrates by Johan Gadolin in 1788. In the Swedish version of his paper he called it 'söndring'. (K. Sv. Vet. Acad. Handl. 1788, 186-197; Crells chem. Annalen 1790, I, 260-273).
As a reactant, the oxidation number of the elemental chlorine is 0. In some of the product, Cl− has an oxidation number of −1, having been reduced; whereas the oxidation number of chlorine in the chlorate ion is +5, indicating that it has been oxidized.