Instantaneous Reaction Rates and Reaction Mechanisms

Instantaneous Reaction Rates and Reaction Mechanisms

Assessment

Flashcard

Science

9th - 12th Grade

Practice Problem

Hard

Created by

Barbara White

FREE Resource

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19 questions

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1.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Collision Theory Noun

[kuh-li-zhun thee-uh-ree]

Back

Collision Theory


A principle stating that reacting particles must collide with sufficient energy and correct orientation in order to form products.

Example: This image shows that for a chemical reaction to occur, molecules must collide with the correct orientation, a key part of Collision Theory.
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2.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Activated Complex Noun

[ak-tuh-vay-tid kom-pleks]

Back

Activated Complex


A temporary, unstable arrangement of atoms at the activation energy peak where old bonds break and new bonds form.

Example: This graph shows that for a chemical reaction to happen, reactants must gain enough energy to form a high-energy, unstable 'activated complex' at the peak.
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3.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Activation Energy Noun

[ak-tuh-vay-shun en-er-jee]

Back

Activation Energy


The minimum amount of energy that reacting particles must possess to form the activated complex and start a reaction.

Example: This diagram shows that reactants need a boost of energy, called activation energy, to get over an 'energy hill' and turn into products.
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4.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Average Reaction Rate Noun

[av-er-ij ree-ak-shun rayt]

Back

Average Reaction Rate


The change in concentration of a reactant or product over a specific time interval, expressed in mol/(L·s).

Example: This image shows a chemical reaction over time. The average reaction rate is found by measuring how fast products, like the gas bubbles, are made.
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5.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Instantaneous Reaction Rate Noun

[in-stun-tay-nee-us ree-ak-shun rayt]

Back

Instantaneous Reaction Rate


The rate of a reaction at a specific moment in time, determined by the slope of a concentration-versus-time curve.

Example: This graph shows that the instantaneous reaction rate at a specific moment (t=500s) is the slope of the tangent line to the concentration-versus-time curve.
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6.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Rate Law Noun

[rayt law]

Back

Rate Law


A mathematical equation that relates the rate of a chemical reaction to the concentrations of the reactants involved.

Example: This table shows that as the concentration of a substance (reactant A) increases, the speed (rate) of the chemical reaction also increases.
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7.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Reaction Order Noun

[ree-ak-shun or-der]

Back

Reaction Order


The exponent for a reactant's concentration in the rate law, which defines how the rate is affected by it.

Example: This table shows that for a zero-order reaction, changing the amount (concentration) of a substance does not change how fast the reaction happens (the rate).
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