From The Chemistry Book
8. Chemical reaction rates depend on factors that influence the frequency of collision of reactant molecules.
8. a. Students know the rate of reaction is the decrease in concentration of reactants or the increase in concentration of products with time.
Students may have an intuitive idea that reaction rate is a measure of how fast reactions proceed, but a quantitative measure for reaction rate also is needed. For example, explosive reactions are very fast, as are many biological reactions in the cell; and other reactions, such as iron rusting, are very slow. Reaction rate is defined as the rate of decrease in concentration of reactants or as the rate of increase in concentration of products, and these reciprocal changes form a balanced equation that reflects the conservation of matter. Students can see from the balanced equation that as the reaction proceeds, the concentration of reactants must decrease, and the concentration of products must increase in proportion to their mole ratios.
8. b. Students know how reaction rates depend on such factors as concentration, temperature, and pressure.
Concentration, temperature, and pressure should be emphasized because they are major factors affecting the collision of reactant molecules and, thus, affecting reaction rates. Increasing the concentration of reactants increases the number of collisions per unit time. Increasing temperature (which increases the average kinetic energy of molecules) also increases the number of collisions per unit time. Though the collision rate modestly increases, the greater kinetic energy dramatically in-creases the chances of each collision leading to a reaction (e.g., the Arrhenius effect). Increasing pressure increases the reaction rate only when one or more of the reactants or products are gases. With gaseous reactants, increasing pressure is the same as increasing concentration and results in an elevated reaction rate.
8. c. Students know the role a catalyst plays in increasing the reaction rate.
A catalyst increases the rate of a chemical reaction without taking part in the net reaction. A catalyst lowers the energy barrier between reactants and products by promoting a more favorable pathway for the reaction. Surfaces often play important roles as catalysts for many reactions. One reactant might be temporarily held on the surface of a catalyst. There the bonds of the reactant may be weakened, allowing another substance to react with it more quickly. Living systems speed up life-dependent reactions with biological catalysts called enzymes. Catalysts are used in automobile exhaust systems to reduce the emission of smog-producing unburned hydrocarbons.




