
2. Pretend two trials of this reaction were run at two different temperatures, 15 "C and...
Two trials of the above reaction are run with the same initial concentration of A. The first trial is performed at 25C and the second at 35C. If the rate constant at 25C is 0.549 M/min, what is the rate constant in the second trial if the reaction has an activation energy of 31.3 kJ/mol?
You run a reaction and determine the value for the rate constant, k, at two different temperatures. The results are as follows: T(K) k 298 3.4E-5 314 1.8E-4 Determine the activation energy for this reaction in kJ/mol.
The rate constant k for a certain reaction is measured at two different temperatures: temperature 148.0°C 78.0°C k 9.7x10? 9.4 x 10° Assuming the rate constant obeys the Arrhenius equation, calculate the activation energy E for this reaction. Round your answer to 2 significant digits. 9.- Omol
The rate constant k for a certain reaction is measured at two different temperatures: temperature 397.0°C 280.0°C k 1.1 x 1010 1.3 x 10° Assuming the rate constant obeys the Arrhenius equation, calculate the activation energy for this reaction. Round your answer to 2 significant digits. 0.
ty ah Run 2 Run 1 Average initial temperature of HCl and A NaOH solutions (°C) 29.8 32.4 Maximum temperature of HCl-NAOH solution (°C) 34.5 30.5 Maximum temperature change for reaction (°C) 13 Total volume of HCl plus NaOH solutions (mL) Mass of final NaCl solution (g) Heat produced from HCl-NaOH reaction (J) Moles of H,O formed in reaction (mol) Heat expected from moles of H,0 formed (J) Heat absorbed by calorimeter (J) Heat capacity of calorimeter (J/oC) Average heat...
1) A + B C Some experiments were run to measure the initial rate of reaction vs. starting concentration of A and B. Here are the results. Experiment number [A], M [B], M initial rate, M/s 1 0.230 0.170 0.330 2 0.460 0.170 2.640 4 0.230 0.510 0.330 If we start with 0.197 M A and 0.330 M B, what will be the initial rate? hint, you must find order, and k. 2) For the reaction A + B +...
help!!!
Problem Statement: How can concentration changes affect a chemical reaction? I, Data Collection: EXPERIMENT # 1 : R BG RG B + + Initial Concentration-I 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 - 0.13 Concentration Change-C -0.17 - 0,17 0.17 Ending Concentration-E 0.43 0.53 0.97 1.07 Calculate the change in concentration of each of the substances in the reaction. In the space below, draw a plot of the concentration v. time and label the axes. Identify the chemical substance that corresponds to...
1. The same reaction takes place in two different vessels, which are initially at atmospheric pressure (1 atm). The first vessel is rigid and does not expand with change in pressure; the second vessel will expand to maintain a pressure of 1 atm inside. Over the course of a reaction, the second vessel expands by 1 liter. a) What is the amount of PV work done by the reaction for each of the vessels?b) Which vessel’s content has a higher enthalpy?c) ...
The amount of oxygen used by a house fly, at a steady temperature of 15°C, can be compared to its oxygen use at a steady temperature to 25°C. Knowing that increased temperature leads to increased biochemical reaction rates, and that flies are an incredible collection of biochemical reactions, you might reasonably predict that the rate of oxygen consumption by the flies is going to be higher at 25°C than it was at 15°C. In fact, the rate of increase for...
(might be 1 or 2, MCQ questions were having images given with them, which we couldn't insert, so ignore those questions if you cannot answer, sorry for inconveinience created, i tried to delete them but might be couldn't done all) 3) Single phase induction motors work because: a) The oscillating magnetic field can induce starting torque in a rotor. b) The oscillating magnetic field can induce running torque in a rotor. c) A capacitance or inductance can create the phase...