1. Demonstrate an understanding of the terms- RATE OF REACTION, RATE EQUATION, ORDER OF REACTION, RATE CONSTANT, HALF-LIFE, RATE DETERMINING STEP, ACTIVATION ENERGY, HETEROGENOUS AND HOMOGENOUS CATALYST.
The
rate of reaction is the rate of change of the concentration of the reactants or products with time. Its unit is moldm
-3s
-1The
rate equation describes how the rate of reaction depends on the concentration of the reactants each raised to the appropriate power.
Example : Consider the following chemical equation : pP +qQ ----> rR + sS
Rate = K[P]
m[Q]
n where m and n are obtained experimentally and K = rate constant
The
order of reaction with respect to a particular reactant is the power raised of the concentration in terms of the reactants in the rate equation.
Example : Consider the following rate equation.
Rate = K[P]
m[Q]
nThe reaction is
m order with respect to
PThe reaction is
n order with respect to
QThe
rate constant is a constant of proportionality between the reaction rate and the concentration of the various species that appear in the rate equation.
NOTE : Rate constant has no fixed unit. Its unit will depend on the power of the concentration in the rate equation.
Half-life, abbreviated t½, is the period of time it takes for the amount of a substance undergoing decay to decrease by half.
The
rate determining step is a slow step out of a series of steps which take place in chemical reactions.
Activation energy is the minimum amount of energy required by reacting particles for a chemical reaction to take place.
A
homogenous catalyst is one that is in the same physical state as the reactants and it operates by a change in oxidation number.
A
heterogenous catalyst is one that is not in the same physical state as the reactants. It operates by absorbing the reactants on its surface, weaking the bonds and accelerating the formation of the products.