Cheat Sheet Chemistry Chapter 6 Rate of Reaction 2
Cheat Sheet Chemistry Chapter 6 Rate of Reaction 2
Cheat Sheet Chemistry Chapter 6 Rate of Reaction 2
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Chapter 6 – Rates of Chemical Changes
A+BC
How quickly are the reactants changed to the product?
Rate at which the product is produced, mass/time (g/s) or volume/time (volume per second –
cm3/s).
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Perform an experiment, measure the mass or quantity of the product of a reaction at different
time intervals.
Mass - gram
Time(s) >>
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2. Collision Theory
Summary:
Without collision, there’s no energy transfer
Collision frequency determines amount of energy transferred
The higher the collision, the higher the reactions
Some factors can determine the rate/frequency of collision
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3. Factors affecting rates of reaction
Temperature
Surface Area
Concentration of solution (or pressure of gas)
Presence of catalyst.
Temperature increases collision because the kinetic energy of the particles increases. Temperature
is directly proportional to the Rate of Reaction. The higher the temperature, the higher the
frequency of collision, the higher the rate of reaction.
Concentration of solution increases the number of particles hence increases the frequency of
collision. Concentration is directly proportional to the Rate of Reaction. The higher the
concentration, the higher the frequency of collision, the higher rate of reaction.
Pressure of gas: the higher the pressure (at constant volume), the higher the frequency of collision,
and hence the higher the rate of chemical reaction.
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Surface area: when the surface area is large, more collision happens. A solid substance has less
surface area compared to liquid, so less collision. Surface Ares is directly proportional to the Rate
of Reaction. The higher the surface, the higher the frequency of collision, the higher rate of reaction.
Catalyst: Catalysts lowers (reduces) the activation energy needed for the reaction, so reaction
happens faster. The lower the activation energy, the higher the rate of reaction. Activation energy is
indirectly proportional to Rate of reaction.
Rate of reaction can be measure by measuring change on mass, change in volume and color changes.
4. Reversible Reactions:
Read up – Page 72
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