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A-Level Chemistry AQA
Physical chemistry
Kinetics
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Cards (25)
What is the definition of activation energy (EA)?
It is the minimum energy which
particles
need to collide to start a reaction.
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What does the Maxwell-Boltzmann energy distribution illustrate?
It shows the spread of energies that molecules of a gas or liquid have at a particular
temperature
.
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What are the key features of the Maxwell-Boltzmann energy distribution curve?
Passes through the
origin
(no molecules with zero energy)
Never meets the x-axis (no maximum energy)
Mean energy is not at the
peak
of the curve
Area under the curve represents total number of
particles
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Why do only a few particles have energy greater than the activation energy (EA)?
Because most molecules have energies between the extremes, and the distribution is not
symmetrical
.
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How can a reaction go to completion if few particles have energy greater than EA?
Particles can gain energy through
collisions
.
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What happens to the energy distribution as temperature increases?
The distribution shifts towards having more
molecules
with higher energies.
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What remains constant when the temperature increases in the Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution?
The total area under the curve remains constant because the total number of
particles
is constant.
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How does increasing temperature affect the Emp and mean energy of particles?
Both the
Emp
and mean
energy
shift to
higher
energy values.
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What is the definition of the rate of reaction?
It is the change in
concentration
of a substance in
unit time
.
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What is the usual unit for measuring the rate of reaction?
mol dm<sup>-3</sup>
s<sup>-1</sup>
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How can the rate of reaction be determined from a concentration vs. time graph?
The
gradient
of the curve represents the rate of reaction.
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What is the initial rate of a reaction?
It is the rate at the
start
of the reaction where it is fastest.
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How can reaction rates be calculated from graphs?
By drawing a tangent to the curve at different times and calculating the
gradient
of the tangent.
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What effect does increasing concentration have on reaction rates?
It increases the frequency of
effective collisions
due to more
particles
per
unit volume
.
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How does increasing concentration affect the shape of the energy distribution curve?
The
shape
does not change, but the curves will be
higher
and the area under the curves will be
greater.
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What happens to the number of molecules with energy greater than EA when concentration increases?
More molecules have energy
greater
than EA, although not a
greater
proportion.
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What factors affect the rate of reaction?
Higher
concentration
Higher
temperature
Increased
surface area
Presence of
catalysts
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How does increasing surface area affect reaction rates?
It causes
successful collisions
to occur more frequently, increasing the rate of the reaction.
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What is the definition of a catalyst?
A catalyst increases
reaction rates
without getting used up.
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How do catalysts increase reaction rates?
By providing an alternative route or mechanism with a lower
activation energy
.
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What is the effect of lower activation energy on the frequency of effective collisions?
More particles will have energy greater than
EA
, leading to a higher frequency of effective collisions.
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How does increasing temperature affect particle collisions?
Particles collide more frequently and more often with energy greater than the
activation energy
.
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What happens to the
proportion
of particles with energy
greater
than the activation energy as temperature
increases
?
A significantly
bigger
proportion of particles have energy
greater
than the activation energy.
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What is the overall effect of increasing temperature on reaction rates?
Increases the
energy of particles
Increases the
frequency of collisions
Increases the frequency of
successful collisions
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What is the difference in activation energy between catalyzed and uncatalyzed reactions?
Catalyzed reactions have lower activation energy
More particles have energy greater than
EA
in catalyzed reactions
Higher frequency of effective collisions in catalyzed reactions
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