Finding Orders of Reaction Experimentally: Chemguide - Answers
Finding Orders of Reaction Experimentally: Chemguide - Answers
Finding Orders of Reaction Experimentally: Chemguide - Answers
d)
the temperature
the volume of the solution
the mass of MnO2
the state of division of MnO2 (by using the same source of MnO2 for each experiment)
the volume of gas collected
log(rate) = log k + n log[H2O2]
Use 1/t as a measure of rate, and plot log (1/t) against log[H2O2]. This will give a straight line.
Measure the slope of the line to give you a value of n.
2. a) The reaction is still continuing while the sample is in the pipette, and will go on while you are
doing the titration as well if you don't do anything to try to slow it down or stop it altogether.
Pouring it into iced water dilutes it, which slows the reaction. It also cools it, and that slows the
reaction as well.
b) There are several problems:
The timing is inaccurate. Even if pouring the reaction mixture into the iced water stopped
the reaction completely, it takes time for a pipette to drain. Recording the time when the
pipette is half-drained is just a compromise.
The reaction is still going on, although more slowly, while you are doing the titration. The
longer it takes to do the titration, the more inaccurate the result.
You only get one attempt at each titration - you can't repeat it for greater accuracy. You are
also having to do the titration as fast as possible which lessens the accuracy as well.
c) The slope of the graph at any point tells you the rate of the reaction for a particular concentration.
Draw a number of tangents to the curve at various concentrations, and then measure their slopes.
That will give you a table of rates and concentrations. You would then plot a graph of log(rate)
against log(concentration), and measure its slope to find a value for the order of reaction.
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Chemguide answers
3. a) You need to choose a filter which absorbs most of the light when the solution is concentrated, and
very little when it is very dilute. There is no really simple way of working out which you need, so
you just try them all in turn with a solution, in this case of iodine, with a similar concentration to the
one you will start with in the real experiment. Choose the one which the meter shows absorbing the
most light.
b) You plot a calibration curve by making up a range of solutions of known concentrations starting
with one with a concentration at least as great as the one you will be using in the real experiment,
and getting progressively more dilute, in each case recording the meter reading for each
concentration.
Plot a graph of these. You can then use this to convert observed readings from your experiment into
actual concentrations of the solution at each time.
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