Year 11

Cards (17)

  • What does the rate of chemical reactions refer to?
    The speed with which reactants are turned into products
  • Why is it important to measure the rate of a chemical reaction?
    To understand how fast reactants are used up or products are formed
  • What is an example of a slow chemical reaction?
    The rusting of iron
  • What is an example of a fast chemical reaction?
    Explosions like fireworks
  • How can we measure the rate of a reaction?
    By measuring how fast reactants are used up or how fast products are formed
  • What is the equation for calculating the rate of reaction based on reactants used?
    Rate of reaction = quantity of reactants used / time taken
  • What is the equation for calculating the rate of reaction based on products formed?
    Rate of reaction = quantity of products formed / time taken
  • What units can be used to measure quantities in the rate of reaction?
    Grams or cm cubed
  • If 180 cm cubed of hydrogen is produced in 2 minutes, what is the rate of reaction?
    1. 5 cm cubed per second
  • If 3 g of magnesium takes 4 minutes to disappear completely, what is the rate of reaction?
    0.0125 g per second
  • What do the calculated rates of reaction represent?
    The average or mean rates of reaction throughout the entire reaction
  • How does the rate of reaction change over time?
    • Starts fast when reactants are abundant
    • Slows down as reactants are used up
  • How can we visualize the rate of reaction on a graph?
    • Time on the x-axis
    • Mass of reactant remaining or volume of product produced on the y-axis
  • What happens to the mass of magnesium in a reaction graph?
    The mass starts at 3 g and falls rapidly, then slows down
  • What happens to the volume of hydrogen produced in a reaction graph?
    The volume starts at zero and quickly increases, then levels off
  • How do you calculate the rate of reaction in moles per minute if 0.6 moles of magnesium are used in 2 minutes?
    0.3 moles per minute
  • What will be covered in the next video?
    • How to calculate the rate of reaction at a particular time
    • Difference from average rate throughout the entire reaction