The rate of the chemical reaction doubles for an increase of 10 K in absolute temperature from 298 K. Calculate activation energy (Ea).
303 R = 19.15 JK−1 mol−1, log 2 = 0.3010
The Arrhenius equation is given by:
\( k = A e^{-\frac{E_a}{RT}} \)
Where:
Using the fact that the rate doubles for a 10 K increase in temperature, we can use the following form of the Arrhenius equation:
\( \frac{k_2}{k_1} = e^{\frac{E_a}{R} \left( \frac{1}{T_1} - \frac{1}{T_2} \right)} \)
Since the rate doubles, \( \frac{k_2}{k_1} = 2 \), and the temperature change is \( \Delta T = 10 \, \text{K} \), with \( T_1 = 298 \, \text{K} \) and \( T_2 = 308 \, \text{K} \). Substituting the known values:
\( 2 = e^{\frac{E_a}{19.15} \left( \frac{1}{298} - \frac{1}{308} \right)} \)
Taking the natural logarithm on both sides:
\( \ln 2 = \frac{E_a}{19.15} \left( \frac{1}{298} - \frac{1}{308} \right) \)
\( 0.693 = \frac{E_a}{19.15} \times \frac{308 - 298}{298 \times 308} \)
Solving for \( E_a \):
\( E_a = \frac{0.693 \times 19.15 \times 298 \times 308}{10 \times 298 \times 308} \)
\( E_a = 56.5 \, \text{kJ/mol} \)
The activation energy \( E_a \) is approximately \( 56.5 \, \text{kJ/mol} \).
Time (Hours) | [A] (M) |
---|---|
0 | 0.40 |
1 | 0.20 |
2 | 0.10 |
3 | 0.05 |
The reaction between A2 (g) and B2 (g) was carried out in a sealed isothermal container. The rate law for the reaction was found to be:
Rate = \( k[\text{A}_2][\text{B}_2] \)
If 1 mole of A2 (g) was added to the reaction chamber and the temperature was kept constant, then predict the change in rate of the reaction and the rate constant.
For a reaction:
\( 2 \text{H}_2\text{O}_2 \xrightarrow{\text{I}} 2 \text{H}_2\text{O} + \text{O}_2 \)
The proposed mechanism is as given below:
(I) \( \text{H}_2\text{O}_2 \xrightarrow{\text{slow}} \text{H}_2\text{O} + \text{IO}^- \) (slow)
(II) \( \text{H}_2\text{O}_2 + \text{IO}^- \xrightarrow{\text{fast}} \text{H}_2\text{O} + \text{I}^+ + \text{O}_2 \) (fast)