Module 5 Chapter 18 Flashcards

(41 cards)

1
Q

What is required for a reaction to take place

A

particles must collide before a reaction can take place

The reactants must possess at least the minimum amount of energy - activation energy

Particles must approach each other in a certain relative way - the STERIC EFFECT

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2
Q

What is the rate of reaction proportional to

A

The concentration of a particular reactant raised to a power

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3
Q

What is the power called

A

The order of the reaction for that reactant

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4
Q

What are the powers for the different orders

A

N = 0 zero order
N = 1 first order
N = 2 second order

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5
Q

What is order

A

The order attributed to a reagent identifies the effect changing its concentration has on rate of a reaction

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6
Q

What is the rate constant k

A

It is a constant of proportionality that reflects the ease that a reaction takes place. Where larger values of k result in a greater rate of reaction.

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7
Q

What does the continuous monitoring method allow

A

Data to be collected through the course of the reaction —> allowing data to be plotted on a. Concentration tie graph

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8
Q

What does calorimetry allow

A

The measurement of the absorption of light passing through a coloured solution

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9
Q

What can be done with the absorption of the coloured solution

A

A calibration curve made from known concentration can then be used to determine the concentration at a given time

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10
Q

How is a calorimetry experiment done (1)

A
  1. a reaction with an observable colour change must be used
  2. You must then zero the colorimeter, in order to create a calibration curve. Which is done by using known concentrations of the species responsible for the observable colour change. Allowing you to convert absorbance readings into concentration readings later
  3. Carry out the reaction between your reactants taking absorbance measurements at regular time intervals.
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11
Q

How is a calorimetry experiment done (2)

A

Compare the absorbance values against the calibration curve from earlier - extrapolating the concentration at these times

Plot concentration against time, which can then be used to determine order of reaction

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12
Q

What can you use concentration time graphs to determine

A

The rate from the gradient
The order from the shape of the curve

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13
Q

What does a first order concentration time graph look like

A

It is a downward curve
Rate is decreasing

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14
Q

What does a second order concentration time graph look like

A

Similar to the first order curve
But it starts steeper and tails of slower

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15
Q

What is the half life of a reaction

A

The time it takes for the concentration to decrease by half

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16
Q

What is a feature of the half life of a first order reaction

A

They have a constant half life and an exponential decay

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17
Q

What is the formula you use to determine k for a first order reactant

A

k = ln2/t 1/2

18
Q

What is the rate concentration graph for a zero order reactant

19
Q

What is the rate concentration graph for a first order reactant

20
Q

What is the rate concentration graph for a second order reactant

21
Q

What is the rate equivalent to for a zero order reactant

22
Q

What is the rate equivalent to for a first order reactant

23
Q

What is the rate equivalent to for a second order reactant

A

Rate = k[A]^2

24
Q

What is a feature of the rate second order rate concentration graph

A

K can’t be determined from this graph unless it’s re plotted as rate against concentration squared

25
What does an initial rates method record
The time it takes for a single easily recognisable change to occur early in the reaction e.g. - set volume of gas - colour change - precipitate formation
26
What is assumed in initial rates methods
That the average rate of reaction = the initial, rate of reaction
27
In the initial rates method what is the formula used to determine rate
Rate = 1/t T- time taken for change to occur 1 is used as an arbitrary point
28
What is a iodine clock reaction
It is a reaction that can be undertaken using the formation of iodine; which forms a complex with starch to produce a blue-black colour change - indicating the completion of the reaction
29
What is a feature of an iodine clock reaction
To do this, only the concentration of one reacts should change whilst the other factors that impact rate are kept constant
30
What are the steps for an iodine clock reaction (1)
Reactants are mixed together in presence of another chemical such as sodium thiosulphate Na2S2O3 (aq) The time taken for the blue-black colour to appear is recorded and initial rates is calculated as 1/t A graph of 1/t is plotted against concentration allowing for visual identification of rate from the graph
31
What are the steps for an iodine clock reaction (2)
Repeats are done with varied concentrations of the same reactant Further experiments are completed with changes in concentrations of other reactants From the orders with respect to each reactant can be determines and the rate equation written. Allowing the rate constant to be calculated
32
What do the thiosulphate ions do in the iodine clock reaction
They are added to delay the time at which the colour change is observed as iodide ions are formed, preventing an immediate change in colour.
33
How does an average rate become more accurate to the initial rate
The shorter the period of time over which an average rate is measured the less the rate changes over that period. So it will be closer to the initial rate.
34
What is a feature of many reactions
They have mechanisms that require more than one step to complete
35
What is the rate determining step
The slowest step is the one that determines the overall reaction rate as it is the step with the greatest activation energy
36
What is a feature of the rate determining step (1)
Not all reactants are involved in the rate determining step and the particle numbers wont match the balanced equation.
37
What is a feature of the rate determining step (2)
There is a direct relationship between the order and the rate determining step, so order relates to the moles involved.
38
What does the Arrhenius equation explain
The effect of temperature on rate of reaction
39
What is the Arrhenius equation
K = Ae ^(-Ea/RT) K = rate constant A = frequency factor Ea - activation factor R = gas constant T = temperature (kelvin)
40
What does the exponential factor relate to
The number of particles that exceed the activation energy.
41
What does the pre-exponential factor A mean
It is a measure of the frequency of collisions that occur.