Calculating Rates of Reaction
- To measure the rate of a reaction, we need to be able to measure either how quickly the reactants are used up or how quickly the products are formed
- The method used for measuring depends on the substances involved
- There are a number of ways to measure a reaction rate in the lab; they all depend on some property that changes during the course of the reaction
- That property is taken to be proportional to the concentration of the reactant or product, e.g., colour, mass, volume
- Some reaction rates can be measured as the reaction proceeds (this generates more data);
- faster reactions can be easier to measure when the reaction is over, by averaging a collected measurement over the course of the reaction
- Commonly used techniques are:
- mass loss
- gas production
Changes in mass
- When a gas is produced in a reaction it usually escapes from the reaction vessel, so the mass decreases
- This can be used to measure the rate of reaction
- For example, the reaction of calcium carbonate with hydrochloric acid produces CO2
- The mass is measured every few seconds and change in mass over time is plotted as the CO2 escapes
Measuring changes in mass using a balance
- The mass loss provides a measure of the amount of reactant, so the graph is the same as a graph of amount of reactant against time
Mass loss of a product against time
- However, one limitation of this method is the gas must be sufficiently dense or the change in mass is too small to measure on a 2 or 3 d.p. balance
- So carbon dioxide would be suitable (Mr = 44.0) but hydrogen would not (Mr = 2.0)
Volumes of gases
- When a gas is produced in a reaction, it can be trapped and its volume measured over time
- This can be used to measure the rate of reaction.
- For example, the reaction of magnesium with hydrochloric acid produces hydrogen
Collecting gases experimental set up
- An alternative gas collection set up involves collecting a gas through water using an inverted measuring cylinder (as long as the gas is not water soluble)
Alternative gas collection set up
- The volume can be measured every few seconds and plotted to show how the volume of gas varies with time
- The volume provides a measure of the amount of product, so the graph is a graph of amount of product against time
Graph of gas volume evolved against time
Measuring concentration changes
- Measuring concentration changes during a reaction is not easy; the act of taking a sample and analysing it by titration can affect the rate of reaction (unless the reaction is deliberately stopped- this is called quenching).
- Often it is more convenient to ‘stop the clock’ when a specific (visible) point in the reaction is reached
- For example when a piece of magnesium dissolves completely in hydrochloric acid
- Another common rate experiment is the reaction between sodium thiosulfate and hydrochloric acid which slowly produces a yellow precipitate of sulfur that obscures a cross when viewed through the solution:
Na2S2O3 (aq) + 2HCl (aq) → 2NaCl aq) + SO2 (g) + H2O (l) + S(s)
The disappearing cross experiment
- The main limitation here is that often it only generates one piece of data for analysis
Worked example
Using the results shown below, calculate the initial rate of reaction for the reaction using 2.0 mol dm-3 HCl (aq)
Mg (s) + 2HCl (aq) → MgCl2 (aq) + H2 (g)
Answer
Step 1: Draw a graph of the results
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- The gradient can be used to give the rate of reaction, however, the graph has produced a curve
Step 2: Draw a tangent to the curve at time = 0 seconds
Step 3: Calculate the gradient
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- Gradient 1.05 mol dm-3 s-1
Examiner Tip
You should be familiar with the interpretation of graphs of changes in concentration, volume or mass against time and be able to calculate a rate from a tangent to the graph