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AP Chemistry 1.5 Chemical Reaction Rates 42 Views
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AP Chemistry 1.5 Chemical Reaction Rates. What is the rate law for the reaction?
Transcript
- 00:03
And here’s your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by limits, know ‘em, love ‘em, [Students listening in class]
- 00:08
and maybe test ‘em every once in a while… But you didn’t hear that from us.
- 00:15
Assume that a reaction occurs by the mechanism given below. What is the rate law for the
- 00:20
reaction?
- 00:21
And here are your potential answers: To figure out the rate law, we need to consider [Spoiler alert sign and Pause button sign post]
Full Transcript
- 00:28
which step in the mechanism limits the rate of the overall reaction, which is called the
- 00:32
“rate limiting step.” …Creativity isn’t exactly a chemist's [A girl awarded a least creative trophy]
- 00:36
strong suit… Anyway, the rate limiting step is kind of
- 00:40
like your grandpa at the grocery store. You can’t walk down the aisle any faster than [Grandpa walks slowly down an aisle and blocks people]
- 00:45
grandpa… And neither can anyone else. Good thing grocery carts don’t have horns.
- 00:49
Just like your grandpa limits your rate of walking, the slowest step in a chemical reaction
- 00:54
mechanism limits the rate of the overall reaction. In this case, we know that the second step,
- 01:01
C reacts to form D, is the slow step. The rate of the overall reaction will be equal
- 01:07
to the rate of this second step. So the second step is a first order reaction [Chemist pouring a substance into an erlenmeyer flask]
- 01:12
with only one reactant, C. That means the rate law for this step is
- 01:17
The rate equals the rate constant times the concentration of C
- 01:22
And that’s the rate of our overall reaction! Ta-da!
- 01:25
But wait, that isn’t one of the final answer choices! What kind of a cheap trick is this? [magician reaches into tophat and hand is bitten by a rabbit]
- 01:31
Well… Remember that C is an intermediate species in this reaction. Our overall rate
- 01:36
law can’t include any intermediate species, so we need to rewrite this equation in terms
- 01:41
of the reactants, species A and B.
- 01:44
The first step in the reaction mechanism, an equilibrium between A and B
- 01:49
and C, is fast. We can assume this step is at equilibrium, so the rate at which A and [A+B on one side of see-saw and C on the opposite]
- 01:56
B are consumed is equal to the rate at which C is formed: In equation form, that means:
- 02:01
the rate constant times concentration of a times concentration of b equals the rate
- 02:08
constant times the concentration of c. Equality for all As, Bs, and Cs! [A, B, C and D letters in the street and D runs away]
- 02:14
Ds can get lost. Anyway, we already figured out that the overall
- 02:17
reaction rate = the rate constant times the concentration of C.
- 02:23
Now we know that the rate constant times the concentration of C equals
- 02:28
the rate constant times the concentration of a times the concentration of b. That means
- 02:32
our overall reaction rate is the rate constant times concentration of a times
- 02:36
concentration of b! Long, concentration-filled story short, that
- 02:39
means C is the correct answer. So next time you’re eating some delicious [Kid jumps up on a kitchen counter for cookies]
- 02:44
fresh-baked cookies, maybe you should make sure the rate limiting step is your dignity
- 02:49
and not how quickly your mom can work that frosting knife.
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