help with this please 1. The value of the rate constant was reported to be 2.62...
For a particular zero-order reaction, the value of the rate constant is 0.075 M·s-1. If the initial concentration of reactant was 0.540 M, how many seconds does it take for the concentration to decrease to 0.150 M? Report your answer to two significant figures.
1. A certain first order reaction has a rate constant of 0.036 min-1. How much of the reactant will remain if the reaction is run for 2.5 hours and the initial concentration of the reactant is 0.31 M? 2. A certain first order reaction has a rate constant of 0.036 min-1. How much of the reactant will remain if the reaction is run for 2.5 hours and the initial concentration of the reactant is 0.31 M? 3. The rate constant...
Integrated Rate Laws 1. The rate law expression for the reaction of sucrose in water C12H22O11 + H2O ---> 2 C6H12O6 Is rate = k[C12H22O11]. a. What is the order with respect to each reactant? b. What is the overall order of the reaction? c. After 2.57 hours, 6.00g/L of C12H22O11 has decreased to 5.40g/L. Express these concentrations in units of M. d. What is the value and units for k given the information in part c? e. Knowing the...
For a first-order reaction, the half-life is constant. It depends only on the rate constant k and not on the reactant concentration. It is expressed as t1/2=0.693kt1/2=0.693k For a second-order reaction, the half-life depends on the rate constant and the concentration of the reactant and so is expressed as t1/2=1k[A]0 Part A. A certain first-order reaction (A→products) has a rate constant of 3.00×10−3 s−1 at 45 ∘C∘C. How many minutes does it take for the concentration of the reactant, [A],...
Question 3 1 pts The rate constant, k, of the first order reaction A B +C is k = 8.62 x 10-35-1. If the initial concentration of A is 2.74 M, how long will it take for the concentration of A to fall below 0.32 M? Give your answer to one decimal place in MINUTES (do not input the units). For example, if your answer is 8.956 minutes, enter 9.0 Question 4 1 pts The rate constant, k, of the...
A
certain reactant disappears by a first order reaction that has a
rate constant K= 3.5x10^-3 s-1. If the initial concentration of the
reactant is 0.500 M , how long will it take for the concentration
to drop to
0.200 M ?
4. A certain reactant disappears by a first-order reaction that has a rate constant k=3.5 x 10 s. If the initial concentration of the reactant is 0.500 M, how long will it take for the concentration to drop...
Learning Goal: To understand how to use integrated rate laws to solve for concentration. A car starts at mile marker 145 on a highway and drives at 55 mi/hr in the direction of decreasing marker numbers. What mile marker will the car reach after 2 hours? This problem can easily be solved by calculating how far the car travels and subtracting that distance from the starting marker of 145. 55 mi/hr×2 hr=110 miles traveled milemarker 145−110 miles=milemarker 35 If we...
A zero-order reaction has a constant rate of 2.40×10−4 M/s. If after 35.0 seconds the concentration has dropped to 3.50×10−2 M, what was the initial concentration? Express your answer with the appropriate units. Learning Goal: To understand how to use integrated rate laws to solve for concentration. A car starts at mile marker 145 on a highway and drives at 55 mi/hr in the direction of decreasing marker numbers. What mile marker will the car reach after 2 hours? This...
1. The rate constant for a certain reaction is k = 5.70×10−3 s−1 . If the initial reactant concentration was 0.750 M, what will the concentration be after 13.0 minutes? 2. A zero-order reaction has a constant rate of 4.40×10−4 M/s. If after 80.0 seconds the concentration has dropped to 1.00×10−2 M, what was the initial concentration?
1. Part: A The rate constant for a certain reaction is k = 6.00×10−3 s−1. If the initial reactant concentration was 0.550 M, what will the concentration be after 10.0 minutes? Part B: A zero-order reaction has a constant rate of 1.80×10−4M/s. If after 75.0 seconds the concentration has dropped to 7.50×10−2M, what was the initial concentration? 2. At 500 ∘C, cyclopropane (C3H6) rearranges to propane (CH3−CH=CH2). The reaction is first order, and the rate constant is 6.7×10−4s−1. If the...