CK-12-Chemistry Intermediate

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

18.2. Rate Laws http://www.ck12.org


Lesson Summary



  • The concentration dependence of a reaction rate is shown in an equation called a rate law. The rate of a
    reaction is equal to a specific rate constant multiplied by the concentration of each reactant raised to some
    power.

  • The specific rate constant is unique for every reaction and is dependent upon temperature. A large rate constant
    indicates a relatively fast reaction, while a small rate constant indicates a relatively slow reaction.

  • Rate laws must be determined experimentally. The order of the reaction with respect to each reactant and the
    value of the specific rate constant can be determined by a set of experiments in which the concentrations of
    various reactants are systematically varied.


Lesson Review Questions


Reviewing Concepts



  1. What is the general relationship between the rate of a reaction and the concentrations of the reactants? Explain.

  2. How does the size of the specific rate constant (k) for a reaction relate to the general speed of the reaction?

  3. A certain reaction is found to depend only upon the concentration of reactant A. How will the rate of the
    reaction be affected when the initial concentration of A is doubled, given each of the three possibilities for the
    order of the reaction?
    a. 1st order
    b. 2nd order
    c. zero order

  4. What are the units of the specific rate constant when the reaction is zero order? 1st order? 2nd order? 3rd
    order?

  5. When performing a set of experiments to determine a rate law, why are initial rates of reaction measured and
    compared?

  6. For the reaction A + B→C, the reaction is first-order with respect to A and second-order overall. Write the
    rate law for the reaction.


Problems



  1. For the decomposition reaction X→Y + Z, the reaction is first-order with respect to X, and the value of
    the specific rate constant is 0.0296 s−^1. Calculate the initial reaction rate when starting with the following
    concentrations of X.
    (a) [X] = 0.410 M
    (b) [X] = 0.0223 M

  2. The reaction between the peroxydisulfate ion (S 2 O 82 −) and the iodide ion (I−) is: S 2 O^28 −(aq)+3I−(aq)→2SO^24 −(aq)+I− 3 (aq).
    (a) From the following data (Table18.2), which were collected at a set temperature, determine the rate law
    and calculate the specific rate constant.


TABLE18.2:Rate Law data


Experiment [S 2 O 82 −] (M) [I−] (M) Initial Rate (M/s)
1 0.080 0.034 2.2× 10 −^4
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