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Problem: 03-02-2

Author:Anda Toshiki
Updated:3 months ago
Words:205
Reading:1 min

Question

The rate law for a particular reaction is rate =k[XY]2=k[\mathrm{XY}]^2. In an experiment, the initial rate of the reaction is determined to be 0.16 mol/(Ls)0.16 \mathrm{~mol} /(\mathrm{L} \cdot \mathrm{s}) when the initial concentration of XY\mathrm{XY} is 0.40 mol/L0.40 \mathrm{~mol} / \mathrm{L}.

  • What is the value of the rate constant, kk, for the reaction?
    • 0.10 L/(mols)0.10 \mathrm{~L} /(\mathrm{mol} \cdot \mathrm{s})
    • 0.40 L/(mols)0.40 \mathrm{~L} /(\mathrm{mol} \cdot \mathrm{s})
    • 1.0 L/(mols)1.0 \mathrm{~L} /(\mathrm{mol} \cdot \mathrm{s})
    • 2.5 L/(mols)2.5 \mathrm{~L} /(\mathrm{mol} \cdot \mathrm{s})

Solution

lo tind the value of the rate constant for the reaction, let's first solve the rate law for kk :

k= rate [XY]2k=\frac{\text { rate }}{[\mathrm{XY}]^2}

Next, let's plug in the initial rate and concentration given in the text:

k=0.16 mol/(Ls)(0.40 mol/L)2=0.16 mol/(Ls)0.16 mol2/L2=1.0 L/(mols)\begin{aligned} k & =\frac{0.16 \mathrm{~mol} /(\mathrm{L} \cdot \mathrm{s})}{(0.40 \mathrm{~mol} / \mathrm{L})^2} \\ & =\frac{0.16 \mathrm{~mol} /(\mathrm{L} \cdot \mathrm{s})}{0.16 \mathrm{~mol}^2 / \mathrm{L}^2} \\ & =1.0 \mathrm{~L} /(\mathrm{mol} \cdot \mathrm{s}) \end{aligned}

So, the value of the rate constant for the reaction is 1.0 L/(mols)1.0 \mathrm{~L} /(\mathrm{mol} \cdot \mathrm{s})