Measuring Rates of Reaction: Things To Measure
Measuring Rates of Reaction: Things To Measure
Measuring Rates of Reaction: Things To Measure
The method chosen depends on the reaction being studied. Sometimes it is easier
to measure the change in the amount of a reactant that has been used up;
sometimes it is easier to measure the change in the amount of a product that has
been produced.
Things to measure
The measurement itself depends on the nature of the reactant or product:
the reactant species to acquire sufficient energy to pass through the transition state
and become products.
Catalysts cannot shift the position of a chemical equilibrium - the forward and
backward reactions are both accelerated so that the equilibrium constant Keq is
unchanged. However, by removing products from the reaction mixture as they
form, the overall rate of product formation can in practice be increased.
Some reactions are slow, such as rusting, and some are fast, like burning.
The rate of reaction depends on the temperature and concentration of the
reactants, and the surface area of any solid reactants.
The rate of reaction can be found by measuring the amount of reactant
used up, or the amount of product formed, in a given time. Catalysts
increase the rate of a reaction without being changed themselves by the
end of the reaction.
Collision theory
Different reactions can happen at different rates. Reactions that occur slowly have a
low rate of reaction. Reactions that happen quickly have a high rate of reaction. For
example, rusting is a slow reaction: it has a low rate of reaction. Burning and
explosions are very fast reactions: they have a high rate of reaction.
Collisions
For a chemical reaction to occur, the reactant particles must collide. But collisions
with too little energy do not produce a reaction.
The particles must have enough energy for the collision to be successful in
producing a reaction.
The rate of reaction depends on the rate of successful collisions between reactant
particles. The more successful collisions there are, the faster the rate of reaction.