Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Chemistry Paper 2
- Ways to measure rate of reaction
- Rate at which a reaction is used
- Rate at which product is created
- Temperature Change
- Areas that effect the rate of reaction
- Surface area of reactants
- More particles are exposed to the other reactants immedeiately
- Companies divide reactants into smaller pieces to increase rate of reaction
- Concentration of reactants
- Greater chance of particles colliding
- Companies use highly concentrated chemicals to increase rate of reactions and for easier storage.
- Temperature
- Increases particle's energy, so they move and collide more
- Companies are able to heat reactants more, increasing the rate of reaction.
- Catalysts
- Lower activation energy needed
- Companies use catalysts, as they mean they don't need to heat it as much and they are reusable.
- Conditions required for a reaction to happen
- The reactants have to collide
- The collision must have enough energy to react
- Activation Energy
- Activation energy is the energy needed for reactants to react
- Chemical reactions can only occur when they have the right amount of activation energy
- Catalysts
- A substance that increases the rate of a chemical reaction without undergoing any physical change
- It provides an alternative reaction pathway to the product
- Companies need to decrease the rate of reaction as this means they don't have to pay workers as much (for shorter hours) and they can react more things in a shorter amount of time.
- Practicals
- Surface area
- Take 3 different sizes of marble chip: small, large and powder. Place each one in 20ml of hydrochloric acid and start a stopwatch. When it has dissolved, stop the stopwatch. The shortest time has the highest rate of reaction.
- Concentration
- Take 5 different concentrations of acid.Put 10ml of Sodium thiosulphate in 20ml of each one and place the reaction over a dark mark. Start the stopwatch, and stop it when the mark can't be seen any more. The one with the lowest time has the highest rate of reaction.
- Temperature
- Take hydrochloric acid at 4 different temperatures. In each one put a 5cm strip of magnesium after measuring the temperature. Wait 1 minute and measure the temperature again. The one with the highest temperature change has the highest rate of reaction.
- Catalysts
- Take some sulphuric acid and zinc and put them into a flask connected to a gas syringe. Wait two minutes and measure the amount of gas in the gas syringe. Repeat this using a catalyst. The highest amount has the highest rate of reaction.
- Hannah Farnell