Table of Contents
ToggleIn chemical kinetics, we often encounter the phenomenon that increasing the concentration of a reactant accelerates the reaction rate. But exactly how much faster? This is where the rate law comes in.
A rate law describes the relationship between the rate of a chemical reaction and the concentrations of its reactants. It’s expressed as:
R=k[A]n[B]m
where:
The reaction order tells us how the concentration of a reactant impacts the reaction rate. If the reaction order for A is 2, doubling [A] will quadruple the reaction rate. The overall reaction order is the sum of individual orders (e.g., if n = 2 and m = 1, the overall order is 3).
Rate laws can only be found by experimenting. Chemists measure the reaction rate with varying concentrations of reactants. Consider this example reaction:
2NO+2H2→N2+2H2O
Given experimental data for different concentrations, we can determine the order of each reactant by observing how rate changes with changes in concentration.
The rate law becomes:
R=k[NO]2[H2]
k is a proportionality constant that quantifies reaction speed. It depends on temperature and changes with the overall reaction order.
Integrated rate laws describe how the concentration of a reactant changes over time. For the AP exam, focus on the following key integrated rate laws:
For the reaction A→B:
Given data shows:
The half-life of a first-order reaction (time it takes for half of the reactant to be consumed) is given by:
t1/2=k0.693
For first-order processes, half-life remains constant regardless of the initial concentration.