Module 2 Flashcards

1
Q

How do you write the rate law for the following reaction? a A + b B → c C + d D

A

Can use any reactant to write the rate law.

  • 1 d [A]
    ———
    a dt
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2
Q

What is the unit for rate law?

A

Concentration/time - usually mol L-1 s-1

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3
Q

What does the rate law describe?

A

How the rate depends on the concentration. (rate constant multiplied by the concentration of acid and/or base reactants) - rate = k [A]x [B]y

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4
Q

What will the rate law be for the general reaction of

a A + b B → c C + d D

A

rate = k [A]x [B]y

x and y are exponents.

x is the order with respect to A.
y is the order with respect to B.
x + y is the overall order of the reaction.

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5
Q

How can the values of the orders in the rate law be obtained?

A

They can only be obtained experimentally, they can not be obtained from the stoichiometry of the reaction.

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6
Q

What does the order of the reactant(s) tell us?

A

The speed at which is reacts and forms into the product

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7
Q

How could be tell if the rate order of a reactant is 0?

A

If we varied the concentration of the reactant, the rate would stay the same (as anything to the power of 0 = 1, so rate law = k).

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8
Q

How could we tell if the rate order of a reactant is 1?

A

If we doubled the concentration of the reactant, the rate would also double, and if we halved the concentration of the reactant, the rate would also be halved.

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9
Q

How could we tell if the rate order of a reactant is 2?

A

The rate is equal to the square of the concentration, so if the rate were to equal 4x10-3 at a concentration of 0.2, if the concentration were doubled to 0.4, the rate would be the the concentration to the power of 2, hence 16x10-3.

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10
Q

When trying to out the reaction order for a reactant, why measure the initial reaction rate?

A

Because if the reaction order of the reactant of being investigated, is non-zero, the reaction rate will decrease over time. (as if the order = 0 it is a linear rate).

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11
Q

What are the 3 factors that affect the rate at which molecules react?

A
  • collision rate
  • collision effectiveness
  • collision orientation
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12
Q

What factors affect collision rate?

A
  • higher concentrations (more particles available to react).

- Greater speed (kinetic energy - from heat) = more collisions

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13
Q

What is collision effectiveness?

A

Collisions must have enough energy to break bonds or form bonds. This energy threshold is called the activation energy (Ea).

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14
Q

How can we improve the collision effectiveness?

A

Increase the temperature, giving molecules more force, as an increase in temperature gives molecules more energy meaning the energy of the molecules can exceed activation energy.

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15
Q

What is collision orientation?

A

Molecules must collide in the correct orientation, for a successful collision.

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16
Q

What is molecularity?

A

The total number of molecules that must collide for a reaction to occur.

1 molecule - unimolecular
2 molecules - bimolecular
3 molecules - termoleular (unlikely, hence we have elementary reactions).

17
Q

What is an elementary reaction?

A

The steps in an overall reaction, which has an intermediate (a molecule in both equations that doesn’t appear in the products of the final reaction.

18
Q

What is the process of breaking of the bonds a protein called, and under what circumstances does it occur?

A

When the temperature exceeds the core human body temperature there is sufficient molecular motion to overcome interactions that maintain protein structure. This is called denaturation.

19
Q

Why can we not predict the rate law from the overall chemical equation?

A

Because almost all reactions take place in a series of steps called elementary reactions.

20
Q

Why do reaction intermediates not appear in the rate law?

A

Because they are not a product or reactant.

21
Q

What is a series of elementary steps describing an overall reaction called?

A

A reaction mechanism.

22
Q

Are you allowed to write the rate laws from a chemical reaction for elementary reactions?

A

Yes

23
Q

Can rate laws ever be proven?

A

No, they can only be supported by experimental rate laws, it can never prove it.

24
Q

What is the rate determining step?

A

The elementary step of a reaction that is considered the slowest. The predicted rate law can be written down from the stoichiometry of the rate determining step.

25
Q

Which step has the highest activation energy in a reaction mechanism?

A

The rate determining step, as it is the longest step.

26
Q

If the 1st elementary reaction has the highest Ea, what does this mean?

A

That this step is the rate determining step.

27
Q

What does a catalyst do?

A

Increases the rate of reaction, without being used up (provides an alternative pathway with a lower Ea).

28
Q

What is an induced fit?

A

When a substrate binds onto a enzyme and both structures can change.

29
Q

What is the enzyme-substrate complex?

A

When the substrate is attached to the active site of the enzyme.

30
Q

What is the difference between a lock and key fit and an induced fit with an enzyme?

A

Lock and key - substrate and active site of the enzyme have the right shape for each other and fit together.

Induced fit - shape of the active site can change to fit the substrate appropriately.

31
Q

How is the activation energy (Ea) for a reaction lowered and made faster by a enzyme-substrate complex?

A

The enzyme helps hold the substrate (reactant) in the correct orientation for the reaction to occur.

32
Q

Increasing the number of substrates will continue to increase the rate of reaction until…

A

All the enzymes are being used, hence the reaction can not proceed any faster (Vmax)

33
Q

If the substrate is limiting..

A

Increasing substrates will increase rate of reaction, until all enzymes are being used.

34
Q

If enzyme is limiting..

A

Increasing substrates will not increase the rate of reaction.

  • there is a maximum velocity (Vmax)