reaction rates and stoichiometry

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Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry In this reaction, the ratio of C 4 H 9 Cl to C 4 H 9 OH is 1:1. Thus, the rate of disappearance of C 4 H 9 Cl is the same as the rate of appearance of C 4 H 9 OH. C 4 H 9 Cl(aq) + H 2 O(l) C 4 H 9 OH(aq) + HCl(aq) Rate = -[C 4 H 9 Cl] t = [C 4 H 9 OH] t

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-  [C 4 H 9 Cl]  t. Rate =. =.  [C 4 H 9 OH]  t. Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry. C 4 H 9 Cl( aq ) + H 2 O( l )  C 4 H 9 OH ( aq ) + HCl( aq ). In this reaction, the ratio of C 4 H 9 Cl to C 4 H 9 OH is 1:1 . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry

Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry

• In this reaction, the ratio of C4H9Cl to C4H9OH is 1:1.

• Thus, the rate of disappearance of C4H9Cl is the same as the rate of appearance of C4H9OH.

C4H9Cl(aq) + H2O(l) C4H9OH(aq) + HCl(aq)

Rate = -[C4H9Cl]t

= [C4H9OH]t

Page 2: Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry

Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry

What if the ratio is not 1:1?

2 HI(g) H2(g) + I2(g)

Rate = − 12

[HI]t

= [I2]t

[H2]t

=

Page 3: Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry

Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry• To generalize, then, for the reaction

aA + bB cC + dD

Rate = −1a

[A]t = −

1b

[B]t =

1c

[C]t

1d

[D]t=

Sample Exercise 14.3 p. 563

Page 4: Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry

Concentration and RateOne can gain information about the rate of a reaction by seeing how the rate changes with changes in concentration.

Page 5: Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry

Sulfur Clock Demonstration Data

FLASK LABEL REACTION TIME (SECONDS)

A

B

C

D

Page 6: Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry

Concentration and Rate

If we compare Experiments 1 and 2, we see that when [NH4

+] doubles, the initial rate doubles.

NH4+(aq) + NO2

−(aq) N2(g) + 2 H2O(l)

Page 7: Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry

Concentration and Rate

Likewise, when we compare Experiments 5 and 6, we

see that when [NO2−] doubles, the initial rate doubles.

NH4+(aq) + NO2

−(aq) N2(g) + 2 H2O(l)

Page 8: Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry

What is Rate Law?

aA + bB products

Page 9: Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry

Concentration and Rate

• This means the Rate [NH4+] & Rate [NO2

−]

Rate [NH4+] [NO2

−]

which, when written as an equation, becomes

Rate Law Eqn = k [NH4+]m [NO2

−]n

• This equation is called the rate law, and k is the rate constant.

m and n are called reaction orders.

Therefore,

Page 10: Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry

What are m and n exponents?• Exponents indicate how the rate is affected by

each reactant concentration – termed reaction orders.

• Rate Law must be determined experimentally.

Page 11: Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry

Overall Reaction OrderRate = k [NH4

+]m [NO2−]n

• The overall reaction order can be found by adding the exponents on the reactants in the rate law … so m + n = ? 1 + 1 = 2

• This reaction is second-order overall.

Page 12: Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry

Rate Constant (k)• Reveals how fast or

slow rxn proceeds.

• LARGE k (~ 109 ) = FAST RATE

• small k ( < or = 101 ) = SLOW RATE

Page 13: Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry

Sample Exercise 14.6 p.568

Page 14: Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry

Sample Exercise 14.6 p.568

Page 15: Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry

Sample Exercise 14.6 p.568

Page 16: Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry
Page 17: Reaction Rates and Stoichiometry

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