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2ys012018 Rates of Chemical Reactions Rates of Chemical Reactions © All chemical reactions have different rates of reactions. © The rate of a chemical reaction can be increased by: Increasing the concentration of a solution. Raising the pressure of a gas. Increasing the temperature of the reaction. Increasing the surface area of a solid Adding a catalyst. The effect of changing the concentration © An example often used when demonstrating chemical reactions is the reaction between hydrochloric acid and calcium carbonate: CaCOx¢s) + ZHCl(aq) > CaClars) + H20(1) + CO2(gy Print © The rate of reaction can be altered by changing the size of the calcium carbonate chips or the concentration of the acid. © If the chips are large and in excess, then only a small fraction of the solid reacts and the chips don’t change shape. This means that the calcium carbonate does not affect the rate of reaction, only the concentration of the hydrochloric acid does. © The rate will decrease over time as the hydrochloric acid is used up (its concentration decreases). © The rate of reaction could be worked out either by measuring the pH of the solution, the decrease in the mass of calcium carbonate, or the increase in the volume of carbon dioxide, hpsiwwa-dcollege.co.uklaepirates.php 4 2ys012018 Volume of COz © The graph above shows the volume of gas produced over time in the reaction between HCI and CacO3 © Each reaction started with 2 mol of HCI with excess calcium carbonate. As you can see from the graph, the rate of reaction tails off towards the end, as the HCI is being used up, i.e. its concentration is decreasing. Rates of Chemical Reactions 2.0 mol dem $$ a fla div? Pa 05 mol din? iv Time © All three reactions result in the same amount of CO2 gas being produced; however the higher the concentration of HCI, the faster the rate of reaction, thus the less time it takes for the reaction to be complete. Rate Equations © As can be seen from the previous graphs, the rate is constant at first (i.e. the graphs are linear for around the first 20% of the total reaction). This initial stage of the reaction can be used to measure the initial rate of reaction. © The table below shows the time taken to produce 50cm? of CO; for each concentration of HCI: Concentration of HCIT | Time taken to produce | Rate ofreaction/ cm® of mol div? 50cm? of CO?! st C02 st 20 58 0.86 20 120 042 05 235, 034 © The units of the rate above are measured in cm? of CO2 per second; this is because it is how the rate of reaction has been measured. If the rate was measured using the decrease in concentration of HCI instead, the units of rate would be mol dm: decrease in mass it would be g s"). hpsiwwa-dcollege.co.uklaepirates.php s'!, or if it was measured by 218 2is0r2018 Rates of Chemical Reactions © From the results in the table above, it can be worked out that the rate of reaction is directionally proportional to the concentration of hydrochloric acid, so if you halve the concentration of HCI will be halved, if you quarter the concentration, the rate will be quartered. Rate « [HCI]! © This relationship can be converted into a rate equation by replacing the proportionality sign with an equals sign and inserting a constant Rate = k[HCI]* © kis the rate constant. ©. If we are measuring the rate of the reaction using the change in concentration, then the units will be: k=rate = mol dm? st (HC mol dm? © The rate is measured in s~ in the case above, but in other rate equations it may be different; it all depends on the units being used to measure the rate and the number of reactants and products. Orders of Reactions © The reaction of calcium carbonate with hydrochloric acid is said to be first order with respect to hydrochloric acid. © This is because the rate depends upon the concentration of hydrochloric acid to the power one. © Take the rate equation below: Rate = k[A]"[B]™ © nis the order of the reaction with respect to A and m is the order of reaction with respect to 8B. © The values of n and m are usually 0, 1 or 2 corresponding to zero, first and second orders; however some reactions can have fractional or negative orders. hpsiwwa-dcollege.co.uklaepirates.php 38 2ys012018 Rates of Chemical Reactions © Orders of reactions must be worked out experimentally; they are totally unrelated to the chemical equation. Working out a rate equation © An experiment was conducted to find out how the concentration of X and Y affect the rate of formation of the product Z. the results were as follows Experiment No. ial M Rake of formation 4 0.05 7 02 2 0.05 2 04 3 0.025 2 O41 4 [0.05 4 08 © Firstly to work out the order of the reaction. Starting with X, we need to look in the table for two different values of [X], when the concentration of Y is kept constant. Experiments 2 and 3 can be used to work out the order of X. PI Rate Relationship 0.05 o4 Dd doubled, rate 0.025 04 quadrupled © When [X] is doubled the rate quadruples, this means that the order of the reaction with respect to [X] is 2 © Now to work out the order of the reaction with respect to X, in this case we need to use reaction 1 and 2: M Rate [Relationship 4 02 [Y] doubled, rate doubled 2 o4 © The order of this reaction with respect to Y is one, as the relationship between [Y] and rate is directionally proportional © The rate equation for the reaction is: Rate = k[X]?[Y] © The overall order of the reaction is three (the two orders added together). © Now to work out the constant. hipiiwmw Acallege co.uklalepirates.php aie 2ys012018 Rates of Chemical Reactions Rate XPM] ©. This can be worked out by using values from the table: k= 02 1x 0.057 k=80 © Note that this k value is only applicable for one temperature: © The overall reaction is Rate = 80[X]2[Y] © Now for the units: k= rate PY = mol dm? s+ (mol dm)? (mol dm) © Cancelling down gives mol"? dm® s“, Half-Lives © When analysing a rate graph, it is possible to look at the initial rate of the reaction to work out the order (as done previously); however it is also possible to look at the half-life for a first order reaction. © The half-life is the time taken for the concentration of a substance to fall to half its starting value. It is often given the symbol t/2. © The reaction of calcium carbonate with hydrochloric acid (looked at previously) can be used to analyse half-lives CaCO3(5) + ZHCl(aq) CaCla(s) + H20(1) + CO2¢g) © The volume of CO2 produced over time is given in the following graph hipiiwmw Acallege co.uklalepirates.php 58 2ys012018 Rate Determi Rates of Chemical Reactions 20 nol ams, ‘400 600-800-1000 ~~ 1200-1400 tine © Looking at the graph, the reaction is half completed when the concentration produced is 120 m3, at this point the concentration of HCI is 1 mol dm°3, The time taken to reach this point is the half-life of the reaction with a starting concentration of 2 mol dm°3. The half-life for this is 141 seconds. © The time taken for the volume of CO2 to change from 120 cm3 to 180 cm? corresponds to a change in concentration of HCI from 1 mol dm"? to 0.5 mol dm, i.e. it is the t/2 value for the reaction with a starting concentration of 1 mol dm°3. The half-life for this is 144 seconds. © The next half-life can be found by calculating the time it takes for the volume of CO? to increase from 180cm3 to 210cm3, This corresponds to [HCI] falling from 0.5 mol dm"3 to 0.25 mol dm°3, The half-life for this is 147 seconds. © The half-lives for the three different parts of the equation are roughly the same; they are independent of the starting concentration of HCI. Therefore the reaction is first order with respect to [HCI]. © Second and zero order processes do not have constant half-lives. © First order processes are never over, the mass is constantly halving every t years. A reaction can be classed as over when the change can no longer be measured. ing Steps © As previously mentioned, the rate of a chemical reaction cannot be worked out by looking at the chemical equation. hpsiwwa-dcollege.co.uklaepirates.php 8 2is0r2018 Rates of Chemical Reactions © This is because most reactions do not take place in one step, but in many. The chemical equation only shows the overall effect of these many small steps. © For example, the reaction below shows the nucleophilic substitution reaction of 2-bromo-2- methylpropane with OH": Hs CH ch part Ot Een GF BE CHy CHy © The reaction is first order with respect to C(CH3)3Br and zero order with respect to OH": Rate = k[C(CH)3Br] © The [OH"] is not involved in the rate equation, i.e. altering it does not have an effect upon the rate of the reaction. © The reason for this is that the reaction does not occur in one step, but it occurs in two steps: 1. The C-Br bond breaks heterolytically: Hs He Oe per > or FF + Br chy CHy This only involves C(CH3)3Br, thus its rate is only dependent on [C(CH3)38r] 2. The carbocation reacts with OH-: CHy fhe a + OH > CHy The reaction for step 2 is much faster than the reaction in step 1. The rate of reaction is always determined by the slowest reaction, therefore it is reaction 1 that is the rate determining step and its equation becomes the rate equation for the whole reaction. Useful books for revision Revise A2 Chemistry for Salters (OCR A Level Chemistry B) Salters (OCR) Revise A2 Chemistry Home hpsiwwa-dcollege.co.uklaepirates.php 718 2ys012018 hpsiwwa-dcollege.co.uklaepirates.php Rates of Chemical Reactions a8

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