Pearson Edexcel ChemistryRates and equilibrium

Rates of reaction

Explain and investigate how concentration, temperature, surface area and catalysts affect reaction rate.

Start here

The key idea

Rate of reaction = amount of reactant used (or product formed) ÷ time.Increasing temperature, concentration, surface area or using a catalyst all increase reaction rate by increasing the frequency of successful collisions.

Equation to know

rate = amount of product formed ÷ time

Reaction Rates
steep = fasttimeproduct made

Use the labels to explain the scientific relationship shown.

Revision notes

The bit that matters

Keep the idea tight, then use the worked example to practise the exact exam wording.

1

Collision theory

For a reaction to occur, particles must collide with sufficient energy (at least equal to the activation energy) and with the correct orientation.Increasing the frequency of successful collisions increases the reaction rate.Four factors do this: temperature (faster particles), concentration or pressure (more particles per volume), surface area (more particles exposed) and catalysts (lower activation energy).

2

Effect of temperature

Raising temperature increases the kinetic energy of particles, so they move faster and collide more often.More importantly, a greater proportion of particles have energy greater than or equal to the activation energy.This is shown on a Maxwell–Boltzmann distribution, where the curve shifts to the right and the shaded area beyond the activation energy increases significantly with small temperature rises.

3

Catalysts

A catalyst increases the rate of reaction without being used up.It provides an alternative reaction pathway with a lower activation energy, so a greater proportion of collisions are successful.On an energy profile diagram, a catalyst lowers the peak of the energy barrier.Enzymes are biological catalysts; transition metals such as iron (Haber process) and platinum (catalytic converters) are industrial catalysts.

4

Measuring rates experimentally

Rates can be measured by recording the volume of gas produced per unit time (gas syringe), the mass lost per unit time (mass balance), the change in absorbance of light (colorimetry), or the time for a precipitate to obscure a mark (cross method).The initial rate is the steepest gradient at the start of a rate graph, when reactant concentrations are highest.

Key terms

Definitions to learn

Rate of reaction

The change in amount of reactant or product per unit time.

Collision theory

The theory that reactions occur when particles collide with sufficient energy and correct orientation.

Activation energy

The minimum energy required for a collision to result in a reaction.

Catalyst

A substance that increases the rate of reaction by providing an alternative pathway with lower activation energy, without being used up.

Maxwell–Boltzmann distribution

A graph showing the spread of kinetic energies among particles in a sample at a given temperature.

Worked example

Explain why increasing the temperature increases the rate of a reaction.

1

Higher temperature gives particles more kinetic energy.

2

Particles move faster and collide more frequently.

3

More collisions have energy equal to or greater than the activation energy.

4

Therefore, the rate of successful collisions (and the rate of reaction) increases.

Final answer

Higher temperature increases rate because more collisions exceed the activation energy.

Exam habit

For collision theory answers, always state BOTH that collisions are more frequent AND that more collisions have energy equal to or greater than the activation energy.

Watch out

Do not say particles collide more — you must add that MORE collisions have energy greater than or equal to the activation energy.

Examiner tips

How to score full marks

  • 1For any rate explanation, mention BOTH increased collision frequency AND more collisions exceeding the activation energy.
  • 2A catalyst lowers activation energy — always include this when explaining how a catalyst works.
  • 3On a rate-of-reaction graph, the gradient (steepness) represents the rate — steepest at the start, levels off when reaction is complete.
Practice questions

Try these yourself

Open each answer only after you have explained the full chemical process.

1State the equation for rate of reaction.[1 mark]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Link amount of change to time.
rate = amount of reactant used (or product formed) ÷ time (1).
2Give two factors that increase the rate of a reaction.[2 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Recall the four main factors.
Any two from: higher temperature (1); higher concentration / greater pressure for gases (1); increased surface area (1); use of a catalyst (1).
3Explain, using collision theory, why increasing concentration increases reaction rate.[4 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Link number of particles to frequency of collisions.
A higher concentration means more particles in the same volume (1); particles collide more frequently (1); more collisions per second have energy greater than or equal to the activation energy (1), so the rate increases (1).
4Explain the effect of a catalyst on reaction rate and on activation energy.[4 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Describe how a catalyst provides an alternative pathway.
A catalyst provides an alternative reaction pathway with a lower activation energy (1); more particles have energy greater than or equal to this lower activation energy (1), so the rate of reaction increases (1). The catalyst is not used up (1).
5Describe an experiment to investigate the effect of concentration on the rate of the reaction between sodium thiosulfate and hydrochloric acid.[5 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Include method, measurement and how rate is calculated.
Mix sodium thiosulfate solution and HCl (1); time how long it takes for a cross beneath the flask to disappear (1); repeat with different concentrations of sodium thiosulfate (1); rate = 1 ÷ time (1); a higher concentration should decrease the time and increase the rate (1).
6Explain why powdering a solid reactant increases the rate of reaction.[4 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Link surface area to collision frequency.
Powdering increases the surface area of the solid (1); more reactant particles are exposed (1); more frequent collisions occur between the solid and the other reactant (1), increasing rate (1).
7On a Maxwell–Boltzmann distribution, sketch the effect of increasing temperature on the distribution of molecular energies.[4 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Describe or annotate the key change.
Curve shifts to the right (higher average energy) (1); becomes broader and lower (1); the area under the curve to the right of the activation energy increases (1), representing the greater proportion of particles with sufficient energy to react (1).
8A student measures the volume of gas produced at regular intervals in a reaction. Sketch the shape of the volume vs time graph and explain the shape.[4 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Describe why the gradient decreases.
Volume increases at a decreasing rate (1) and levels off when a reactant is used up (1); rate is fastest at the start when concentration is highest (1) and decreases as reactants are consumed (1).
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