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Section 16-2

Section 16.2 Factors Affecting Reaction Rates. Identify factors that affect the rates of chemical reactions. Explain the role of a catalyst. Section 16-2. The Nature of Reactants. Some substances react more readily than others. Section 16-2. Concentration.

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Section 16-2

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  1. Section 16.2 Factors Affecting Reaction Rates • Identify factors that affect the rates of chemical reactions. • Explain the role of a catalyst. Section 16-2

  2. The Nature of Reactants • Some substances react more readily than others. Section 16-2

  3. Concentration • Chemists change reaction rates by changing concentrations of reactants. • When concentrations are increased, more molecules are available to collide, and therefore collisions occur more frequently. Thus the rate of reaction will increase. Section 16-2

  4. Surface Area • Greater surface area allows particles to collide with many more particles per unit of time. • For the same mass, many small particles have more surface area than one large particle. • Reaction rate increases with increasing surface area. Section 16-2

  5. Temperature Increasing temperature generally increases reaction rate. For example, you know that the reactions that cause foods to spoil occur faster at room temperature than when the foods are refrigerated. • Increasing temperature increases the kinetic energy of the particles. • Reacting particles collide more frequently at higher temperatures. Section 16-2

  6. Temperature (cont.) • High-energy collisions are more frequent at a higher temperature. • As temperature increases, reaction rate increases. Section 16-2

  7. Temperature (cont.) This graph compares the numbers of particles that have sufficient energy to react at temperatures T1 and T2 , where T2 is greater than T1 .The number of high-energy collisions at the higher temperature, T2 , is greater than the number at the lower temperature, T1 . Therefore, as the temperature increases, more collisions result in a reaction. Section 16-2

  8. Catalysts and Inhibitors • A catalystis a substance that increases the rate of a chemical reaction without being consumed in the reaction. • Catalysts are used extensively in manufacturing because producing more of a product quickly reduces its cost. A catalyst does not yield more product and is not included in either the reactants or the products of the reaction. Thus, catalysts are not included in chemical equations. • An inhibitoris a substance that slows or prevents a reaction. Section 16-2

  9. How catalysts and inhibitors work :A catalyst lowers the activation energy required for a reaction to take place at a given temperature. Recall that a low activation energy means that more of the collisions between particles will have sufficient energy to overcome the activation energy barrier and bring about a reaction. By lowering the activation energy, a catalyst increases the average reaction rate .

  10. Inhibitors can act in a variety of ways. Some block lower energy pathways and thus raise the activation energy of a reaction. Others react with the catalyst and destroy it or prevent it from performing its function. In biological reactions, an inhibitor might bind the enzyme that catalyzes a reaction and prevent the reaction from occurring. In the food industry, inhibitors are called preservatives or antioxidants

  11. Catalysts and Inhibitors (cont.) • Catalysts lower the activation energy. • Low activation energy means more collisions between particles have sufficient energy to react. Section 16-2

  12. Catalysts and Inhibitors (cont.) • A heterogeneous catalyst exists in a physical state different than that of the reaction it catalyzes. • A homogeneous catalyst exists in the same physical state as the reaction it catalyzes. Section 16-2

  13. A B C D Which of the following generally does not increase the rate of a chemical reaction? A.increasing concentration B.adding a catalyst C.adding an inhibitor D.increasing temperature Section 16-2

  14. A B C D High-energy particle collisions are more frequent: A.when an inhibitor is present B.when temperature is decreased C.when activation energy is higher D.when temperature is increased Section 16-2

  15. Q1:Explain how collision theory accounts for the effect of concentration on reaction rate. • Increasing reactant concentration increases collision frequency between reactant particles. • Q2: Explain the difference between a catalyst and an inhibitor. • A catalyst speeds up the rate of a reaction by lowering the activation energy. An inhibitor slows or even stops a reaction by interfering with the reactants or with the catalyst .

  16. Q3: Describe the effect on the rate of a reaction if one of the reactants is ground to a powder rather than used as a single chunk. • The rate of the reaction increases because more surface area is available for reaction. • Q4: Infer If increasing the temperature of a reaction by 10 K approximately doubles the reaction rate, what would be the effect of increasing the temperature by 20 K? • The rate would quadruple.

  17. A B C D Increasing the temperature of a reaction increases the rate of reaction by: A.increasing the collision frequency B.increasing the number of high-energy collisions C.both a and b D.none of the above Chapter Assessment 5

  18. End of section 16.2

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