Kinetics Flashcards

1
Q

What effect do the following have on the rate of reaction?

a) temperature
b) pressure

A

a) increase in temperature:
Greater average kinetic energy
Greater proportion of successful collisions

b) increase in pressure:
Collision frequency increases
Same speed & average kinetic energy

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2
Q

Describe how to carry out an iodine-clock titration

A

Measure samples of reactants of know concentration
Mix them together, start the clock and stir
At regular intervals withdraw samples and quench with sodium hydrogencarbonate or ice cold water (quenches & neutralises acid)
Titrate iodine with sodium thiosulfate

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3
Q

How can colorimetry be used to determine the rate of reaction?

A

Use a colorimeter to measure the absorbance or transmittance of light through a sample.
Then use a calibration curve to convert absorbance/transmittance into concentration.

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4
Q

Define the order of reaction

A

The sum of the powers to which the concentrations of the reactants are raised in the rate equation.

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5
Q

What is the rate determining step?

A

The slowest step in a multi-step reaction

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6
Q

What effect does a catalyst have on the rate of reaction?

What is autocatalysis?

A

A catalyst speeds up the rate of reaction by providing an alternative reaction route of lower activation energy. A greater proportion of molecules have energy >_ the activation energy.
Autocatalysis is when a reaction product is the catalyst.

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7
Q

What is the collision theory?

A

That reactant molecules must collide with correct orientation and kinetic energy >_ activation energy.

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8
Q

Why do tertiary halogenoalkanes react via SN1, but primary halogenoalkanes react via SN2?

A

Tertiary: favour SN1 because they have electron donating methyl groups that stabilise the charge on the carbocation
Primary: favour SN2 because they do not form stable carbocation intermediates and have less steric hinderance from methyl groups.

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9
Q

What is the purpose of sodium thiosulfate in the titration?

A

To reduce the iodine to iodide ions and prevent and colour change until a fixed amount of reaction has occurred (helps measure time taken for iodine to react)

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10
Q

Explain why the initial concentration of a reagent is much higher than that of the reagent being measured?

A

To eliminate the effect of change in concentration on the rate. (So it’s concentration remains unchanged and so the concentration of the reactant being measured is the only variable.)

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