1) What are the units on the rate constant ( the reaction is a 2nd order...
What is the rate constant and rate constant units for a 3.5 order reaction? Given a rate of 5.2x10^-3 M/s; and the rate orders 1, 1/2, and 2 (given all three reactant concentrations are 0.10M). I got 16.44 M^-2.5 s^-1 but I'm not sure if my units are correct.
Briefly (1-2 sentences) explain how each of the following affect the rate constant of a reaction. a.) Reactant concentrations b.) Nature of reactants c.) Temperature
Kinetics of the permanganate and Oxalate Reaction.
2. Write out the general rate law for today's reaction with the two reactants. Use x and y for the orders of reaction for each reactant, and include the rate constant. How will the reaction rate be monitored? A B CtD Ra tekLAJEO 3. If different students use different concentrations of the same reactants, should there be any difference in calculated values for the rate constant? Why or why not? 4. Suggest two...
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],...
For a first-order reaction, the half-life is constant. It depends only on the rate constant k k and not on the reactant concentration. It is expressed as t1/2=0.693k t 1 / 2 = 0.693 k 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. A certain first-order reaction (A→products A → p r o d u c t s ) has a rate constant of 9.30×10−3...
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 t 1/2 = 0.693 k For a second-order reaction, the half-life depends on the rate constant and the concentration of the reactant and so is expressed as t 1/2 = 1 k[A ] 0 Part A A certain first-order reaction ( A→products ) has a rate constant of 9.90×10−3 s −1 at 45 ∘...
1)The rate law of a reaction is rate =k[X]³. The units of the rate constant areL mol-1 s-1mol² L-2 s-1mol L-1S-2L² mol-2 s-1mol L-1S-12)Given the following rate law, how does the rate of reaction change if the concentration of Z is tripled? Rate =k[X]³[Y]²[Z]⁰The rate of reaction will increase by a factor of136803)What data should be plotted to show that experimental concentration data fits a first-order reaction?1 / [reactant] vs. time[reactant] vs. timeln (k) vs. Ealn (k) vs. 1 / Tln [...
1) A certain first order reaction has a rate constant of 0.038 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 0.35 M? 2)Which of the following correctly represents a first order integrated rate law? (Select all that are correct, there may be more than one.) A. [A]0 = [A]te-kt B. [A]t = [A]0ekt C. ln [A]t = ln [A]0 - kt D. [A]t =...
25. The rate constant of a first-order decomposition reaction is 0.0267 s-l. If the initial concentration of reactant is 0.198 M, what is the concentration of reactant after 30.0 seconds? 26 Hydrogen perovide dome
QUESTION 1 Variable(s) that affect rate include: temperature concentration pressure of gasses All of the above a and b only 1 points QUESTION 2 The rate constant (k) for a reaction: has units of M/s. changes with temperature is different for different concentrations of reactants All of the above b and c 1 points QUESTION 3 If a reactant is 2nd order, doubling the concentration of the reactant will: double the rate of the reaction triple the rate...