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AQA GCSE Chemistry
5. Energy changes
5.2 Reaction profiles
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A reaction profile is a graph that shows how the energy of reactants and products changes during a chemical
reaction
What happens to energy during an exothermic reaction?
Energy is released
Match the feature of a reaction profile with its description:
Reactants ↔️ Starting energy level
Products ↔️ Final energy level
Activation energy ↔️ Minimum energy to start reaction
Enthalpy change ↔️ Overall energy change
Match the reaction type with its energy level change:
Exothermic ↔️ Products have lower energy
Endothermic ↔️ Products have higher energy
The transition state is a high-energy, unstable
intermediate
A reaction profile shows the energy changes during a
chemical reaction
.
True
What is the energy change in an endothermic reaction?
Energy is absorbed
In an endothermic reaction, the activation energy is typically lower than in exothermic reactions.
False
What is a reaction profile in chemistry?
Graphical representation of energy changes
Endothermic reactions require energy to be
absorbed
An exothermic reaction results in products with lower
energy
than the reactants.
What is the energy level of the transition state?
Highest
In exothermic reactions, the activation energy is generally
lower
than in endothermic reactions.
Match the term with its description:
Activation energy ↔️ Peak height on reaction profile
Enthalpy change ↔️ Difference in energy levels of reactants and products
Match the reaction type with its energy change:
Exothermic ↔️ Energy is released
Endothermic ↔️ Energy is absorbed
Exothermic reactions typically have lower activation energies than
endothermic
reactions.
True
Exothermic reactions release energy and have generally lower activation
energies
The transition state is a stable and long-lived intermediate during a reaction.
False
Match the key features of the transition state with their descriptions:
Energy ↔️ Highest energy state
Stability ↔️ Unstable
Lifetime ↔️ Short-lived
Bond Status ↔️ Bonds breaking and forming
The enthalpy change in a reaction profile represents the overall energy change between the
reactants
and products.
Why is the activation energy generally higher in endothermic reactions?
Energy must be absorbed
Match the features of a reaction profile with their descriptions:
Reactants ↔️ Starting point with initial energy
Products ↔️ End point with final energy
Activation energy ↔️ Minimum energy to start reaction
Enthalpy change ↔️ Overall energy change
Understanding the reaction profile helps explain the
energy changes
involved in a chemical reaction.
True
Match the activation energy level with the reaction rate:
Low ↔️ Fast
High ↔️ Slow
Endothermic reactions absorb energy, resulting in products with higher energy than the reactants.
True
A reaction profile shows how the energy of the system changes as the reaction progresses from
reactants
to products.
True
Why is activation energy higher in endothermic reactions?
Energy is absorbed to form less stable products
Activation energy
is the energy required to initiate a chemical reaction.
True
The enthalpy change is the overall energy change between reactants and
products
Activation energy is the energy needed to break bonds in reactants and form the transition
state
The transition state represents the state where reactants have partially broken original bonds and are beginning to form new
bonds
The transition state occurs when reactants have fully formed new bonds.
False
Arrange the key features of a reaction profile in the order they appear during a reaction:
1️⃣ Reactants
2️⃣ Activation energy
3️⃣ Products
Exothermic reactions have a generally lower
activation
energy.
What is a reaction profile used to illustrate?
Energy changes in reactions
The minimum energy required to start a chemical reaction is called
activation
energy.
Lower activation energies lead to faster
reaction rates
.
True
The transition state has a short lifetime because it is highly
unstable
.
In exothermic reactions, the products have a lower energy level than the reactants.
True
What does a positive enthalpy change indicate about a reaction?
Endothermic reaction
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