Rate of reaction: How quickly the reactants turn into the products
2 ways to calculate mean rate of reaction
Quantity of reactant used / time taken
Quantity of product formed / time taken
Volume of gas produced experiment + rate of reaction
Mixture of reactants is connected to a gas syringe OR an upside down measuring cylinder, as the reaction happens, gas is collected
Rate = volume of gas produced (cm^3) / time taken (s)
Rate = cm^3/s
Change in mass experiment + rate of reaction
Mixture of reactants is placed onto balance, as the reaction happens the gas produced goes out and mass decreases
Rate = Change in mass (g) / time taken (s)
Rate = g/s
Change in colour experiment
Place reactants over a white piece of paper with a cross on, time how long it takes for the cross not to be visible
Quicker its not visible, quicker the reaction
Steep gradient on a graph means: reaction happened quickly
Shallow gradient on a graph means: reaction happened slowly
Calculating mean rate of reaction from a graph
Change in mass / Change in time (Mean rate only applies between the points measured)
What has to happen for a reaction to occur?
Particles have to collide
2 ways to increase rate of reaction
Increase frequencyofcollisions
Increase energyoftheparticleswhentheycollide
Why do particles need to have energy to react?
If they do not collide with enough force they will just bounce apart
Increasing rate of reaction - increase the temperature
Heat the container that the reactants are in
Particles movequicker and collidemore
Particles have moreenergy so reactmore when they collide
Increasing rate of reaction - increase concentration
Use a solution with more solute but same amount of solvent
More reactant particles, collisions more frequent
Increasing rate of reaction - Increase pressure of gas
Use more gas or smaller container
Less space between particles = more frequent collisions
Increasing rate of reaction - Increase surface area of solids
Cut solid into smaller pieces or grind into powder
larger surface are of reactant particles to collide and react
Catalyst: Specific substrate that can increase the rate of reaction
Equilibrium: When a reversable reaction has an unchanging ratio of products to reactants
Reversable reaction
The products can produce the original reactants
Same amount of energy is produced in either direction
The same amount of energy is produced in either direction of the reversable reaction
What happens if a reversable reaction is carried out in a closed system?
It will eventually reach dynamic equilibrium
Dynamic equilibrium - A point in time where the forward and reverse reactions have the same rate
What happens at dynamic equilibrium?
Reactants are still turning into products
Products are still turning back into reactants
The rates of these 2 processes are equal
At dynamic equilibrium the amount of reactant and products are constant but not necessarily equal
How to change the conditions of a reaction in a closed system? (3)
Changing the concentration of one of the substances
Changing the temperature of the vessel its in
Changing the pressureinside the vessel
Le Chatelier's principle
In order to change the amounts of reactant and product at equilibrium, the conditions must be changes, the closed system counteract the change by favoring either the forward or reverse reaction
Changing conditions - Decreasing concentration of product
Effect - Favours the forward reaction
Why - Opposes the change by making less reactant and more product
Changing conditions - Increase concentration of product
Effect - Favours the reverse reaction
Why - opposes the change by making more reactant and less product
Changing concentrations - Decrease concentration of reactant
Effect - Favour the reverse reaction
Why - Opposes the change by making more reactant and less product
Changing conditions - Increase concentration of reactant
Effect - Favours the forward reaction
Why - Opposes the change by making more product and less reactant
The effect of changing temperature depends on which direction is exothermic and which direction is endothermic
Changing conditions - Increase temp of surroundings
Effect - Favours the endothermic reaction
Why - Opposes the change by decreasing temp of surroundings
Changing conditions - Decrease temp of surroundings
Effect - Favours the exothermic reaction
Why - Opposes the change by increasing the temp of the surroundings
The effect of changing the pressure depends on which side of the reaction has more molecules of gas
Changing conditions - increase the pressure
Effect - Favours the reaction that results in fewer molecules
Why - opposes the change by decreasing the number of molecules within the vessel, decreasing the pressure
Changing conditions - Decreasing the pressure
Effect - Favours the side which results in more molecules
Why - Opposes the change by increasing the number of molecules within the vessel, increasing the pressure