Reaction Rates and Rate Laws Flashcards
Describe the relationship between surface area and reaction rate
direct; • When the surface area of a given amount of substance is increased, the reaction rate will increase
• When more material is available, the reaction will go faster
What are the units for a reaction rate?
o Because the rate is defined as a change in concentration per time the units are Ms-1 (Molarity per second)
Describe the relationship between reaction rate and temperature
direct; • All elementary reactions have a faster rate at higher temperatures
What 4 factor affect reaction rate?
Medium or Nature of the Reactants
Concentration
Temperature
Catalyst
What creates the energy barrier between reactants and products?
• The energy barrier between reactants and products means that before you can form any new bonds of the product molecules, you have to break bonds in the reactants or form some intermediate compounds that are usually higher in energy
What does a reaction rate measure?
o The rate of a chemical reaction is a measure of how fast the reaction is proceeding
Specifically, it is a measure of the change in the concentration of the chemical species as a function of time
What is a catalyst?
• A catalyst is a compound that essentially changes the reaction mechanism for a reaction allowing it to proceed at a faster rate
Why doesn’t a catalyst appear as a reactant or product?
• A catalyst is part of the reaction mechanism but it is not consumed during the chemical reaction and thus does not appear as a reactant or product
What is the purpose of a catalyst?
• The typical role of a catalyst is to lower the energy barrier between reactants and products (activation energy) allowing the reaction to proceed at a faster rate
What is the rate law dependent on?
o The rate law for a reaction is dependent on the specifics of how a reaction proceeds called the mechanism (what bond break first, what bonds form first, any intermediate chemical species)
What is a rate law?
o A rate law relates the rate of a reaction to the concentration of the reactants