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Rates of Reaction Mrs. Coyle

Rates of Reaction

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Rates of Reaction . Mrs. Coyle. How fast does aging occur?. http://www.ging-strategie.de/Anti%20Aging%20Strategie.JPG. How fast does the candle burn?. http://images.usatoday.com/tech/_photos/2006/03/28/aprilfig1.jpg. Reaction Rate. The speed with which products form from the reactants. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Rates of Reaction

Rates of Reaction Mrs. Coyle

Page 2: Rates of Reaction

How fast does aging occur?

http://www.ging-strategie.de/Anti%20Aging%20Strategie.JPG

Page 3: Rates of Reaction

How fast does the candle burn?

http://images.usatoday.com/tech/_photos/2006/03/28/aprilfig1.jpg

Page 4: Rates of Reaction

Reaction RateThe speed with which products form from the reactants.

Page 5: Rates of Reaction

Exothermic reaction: reaction gives off energy.

reactants products + energy

Endothermic reaction: reaction takes in energy.

energy + reactants products

Exo- and Endothermic Reactions

Page 6: Rates of Reaction

Bonds and Energy

When bonds are broken: energy is absorbed.(analogy: stretching a rubber band)

When bonds are formed : energy is released. (analogy: releasing a stretched rubber band)

Page 7: Rates of Reaction

Average bond energies, kcal/moleC-H 98

O-H 110

C-C 80

C-O 78

H-H 103

C-N 65

O=O 116 (2 x 58)C=O 187* (2 x 93.5)

C=C 145 (2 x 72.5)(* as found in CO2)

Page 8: Rates of Reaction

Ex: Exothermic

• H2 + Cl2 2 HCl + 183 kJ/mol

Page 9: Rates of Reaction

Ex: Endothermic

2HgO + 181.7 kJ 2Hg + O2

Page 10: Rates of Reaction

Net Energy Change

H= Potential Energy of Products-Potential Energy of Reactants

H <0 exothermic

H >0 endothermic

Page 11: Rates of Reaction

Collision Theory of Reactions

http://staff.um.edu.mt/jgri1/teaching/che2372/notes/10/10_19.gif

Page 12: Rates of Reaction
Page 13: Rates of Reaction

Activation Energy

• Minimum amount of kinetic energy the reactants must have in order to react.

• The particles form an activated complex (transition state) that is an unstable arrangement of atoms that lasts a few moments. Then the products are formed.

Page 14: Rates of Reaction

Analogy

http://www.800mainstreet.com/7/0007-004-reac_rate2.htm

Page 15: Rates of Reaction

Potential Energy vs Time (Exothermic)

http://staff.um.edu.mt/jgri1/teaching/che2372/notes/10/theory.html

Time

Heat of Reaction H

Page 16: Rates of Reaction

Energy vs Time (Endothermic)

Heat of Reaction H

Activation Energy

Page 17: Rates of Reaction

Reaction Rates are affected by:

• Concentration• Temperature• Catalyst• Surface Area (Particle Size)• Mixing (Stirring)

Page 18: Rates of Reaction

Concentration Effect on Reaction Rates

The more concentrated, the higher the reaction rate.

Why?

http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en/thumb/f/ff/525px-Molecular-collisions.jpg

Page 19: Rates of Reaction

Temperature Effect on Reaction Rates

The higher the temperature, the faster the rate.

Why?

Page 20: Rates of Reaction

Catalyst Effect on Reaction RatesA catalyst lowers the activation energy, thus the reaction proceeds faster.

Page 21: Rates of Reaction

Particle Size (Surface Area)

• The smaller the particle size the faster the rate.

Page 22: Rates of Reaction

Inhibitors

• Substances that negate the effect of the catalyst.