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Chapter 5 of 10
NCERT Solutions

Chemical Kinetics

Uttarakhand Board · Class 12 · Chemistry

NCERT Solutions for Chemical Kinetics — Uttarakhand Board Class 12 Chemistry.

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39 Questions Solved · 2 Sections

Intext Questions

3.1For the reaction R → P, the concentration of a reactant changes from 0.03M to 0.02M in 25 minutes. Calculate the average rate of reaction using units of time both in minutes and seconds.Show solution
Given:
- Initial concentration, [R]1=0.03M[R]_1 = 0.03\,\text{M}
- Final concentration, [R]2=0.02M[R]_2 = 0.02\,\text{M}
- Time interval, Δt=25min\Delta t = 25\,\text{min}

Formula:
Average rate=Δ[R]Δt=[R]2[R]1Δt\text{Average rate} = -\frac{\Delta[R]}{\Delta t} = -\frac{[R]_2 - [R]_1}{\Delta t}

In minutes:
Average rate=(0.020.03)mol L125min=0.0125mol L1min1\text{Average rate} = -\frac{(0.02 - 0.03)\,\text{mol L}^{-1}}{25\,\text{min}} = -\frac{-0.01}{25}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{min}^{-1}
=4×104mol L1min1= 4 \times 10^{-4}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{min}^{-1}

In seconds (converting: 25min=25×60=1500s25\,\text{min} = 25 \times 60 = 1500\,\text{s}):
Average rate=(0.020.03)1500mol L1s1=0.011500\text{Average rate} = -\frac{(0.02 - 0.03)}{1500}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1} = \frac{0.01}{1500}
=6.66×106mol L1s1= 6.66 \times 10^{-6}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}

Answer: Average rate =4×104mol L1min1=6.66×106mol L1s1= 4 \times 10^{-4}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{min}^{-1} = 6.66 \times 10^{-6}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}
3.2In a reaction, 2A → Products, the concentration of A decreases from 0.5 mol L⁻¹ to 0.4 mol L⁻¹ in 10 minutes. Calculate the rate during this interval.Show solution
Given:
- Reaction: 2AProducts2\text{A} \rightarrow \text{Products}
- [A]1=0.5mol L1[A]_1 = 0.5\,\text{mol L}^{-1}, [A]2=0.4mol L1[A]_2 = 0.4\,\text{mol L}^{-1}
- Δt=10min\Delta t = 10\,\text{min}

Formula:
Rate of reaction=12Δ[A]Δt\text{Rate of reaction} = -\frac{1}{2}\frac{\Delta[A]}{\Delta t}

Calculation:
Rate=12×(0.40.5)mol L110min\text{Rate} = -\frac{1}{2} \times \frac{(0.4 - 0.5)\,\text{mol L}^{-1}}{10\,\text{min}}
=12×0.110mol L1min1= -\frac{1}{2} \times \frac{-0.1}{10}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{min}^{-1}
=0.120=0.005mol L1min1= \frac{0.1}{20} = 0.005\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{min}^{-1}

Answer: Rate of reaction =5×103mol L1min1= 5 \times 10^{-3}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{min}^{-1}
3.3For a reaction, A + B → Product; the rate law is given by, r = k[A]^(1/2)[B]². What is the order of the reaction?Show solution
Given: Rate law: r=k[A]1/2[B]2r = k[A]^{1/2}[B]^2

Concept: Order of reaction with respect to each reactant is the power of its concentration in the rate law. Overall order is the sum of all powers.

Calculation:
- Order with respect to A =12= \dfrac{1}{2}
- Order with respect to B =2= 2

Overall order=12+2=52=2.5\text{Overall order} = \frac{1}{2} + 2 = \frac{5}{2} = 2.5

Answer: The order of the reaction is 2.5.
3.4The conversion of molecules X to Y follows second order kinetics. If concentration of X is increased to three times how will it affect the rate of formation of Y?Show solution
Given: XYX \rightarrow Y, second order reaction.

Rate law: Rate=k[X]2\text{Rate} = k[X]^2

Initial rate: r1=k[X]2r_1 = k[X]^2

New rate when [X][X] is tripled, i.e., [X]new=3[X][X]_{\text{new}} = 3[X]:
r2=k(3[X])2=9k[X]2=9r1r_2 = k(3[X])^2 = 9k[X]^2 = 9\,r_1

Answer: The rate of formation of Y will increase 9 times when the concentration of X is tripled.
3.5A first order reaction has a rate constant 1.15 × 10⁻³ s⁻¹. How long will 5 g of this reactant take to reduce to 3 g?Show solution
Given:
- k=1.15×103s1k = 1.15 \times 10^{-3}\,\text{s}^{-1}
- Initial amount, [R]0=5g[R]_0 = 5\,\text{g}
- Final amount, [R]=3g[R] = 3\,\text{g}

Formula for first order reaction:
t=2.303klog[R]0[R]t = \frac{2.303}{k}\log\frac{[R]_0}{[R]}

Calculation:
t=2.3031.15×103log53t = \frac{2.303}{1.15 \times 10^{-3}}\log\frac{5}{3}
=2.3031.15×103×log(1.667)= \frac{2.303}{1.15 \times 10^{-3}} \times \log(1.667)
=2.3031.15×103×0.2219= \frac{2.303}{1.15 \times 10^{-3}} \times 0.2219
=2003×0.2219= 2003 \times 0.2219
444s\approx 444\,\text{s}

Answer: The time required is t444st \approx 444\,\text{s}.
3.6Time required to decompose SO₂Cl₂ to half of its initial amount is 60 minutes. If the decomposition is a first order reaction, calculate the rate constant of the reaction.Show solution
Given:
- Half-life, t1/2=60mint_{1/2} = 60\,\text{min}
- First order reaction

Formula:
t1/2=0.693kt_{1/2} = \frac{0.693}{k}

Calculation:
k=0.693t1/2=0.69360mink = \frac{0.693}{t_{1/2}} = \frac{0.693}{60\,\text{min}}
=0.01155min1= 0.01155\,\text{min}^{-1}

Converting to s⁻¹: k=0.0115560s1=1.925×104s1k = \dfrac{0.01155}{60}\,\text{s}^{-1} = 1.925 \times 10^{-4}\,\text{s}^{-1}

Answer: k=1.925×104s1k = 1.925 \times 10^{-4}\,\text{s}^{-1}
3.7What will be the effect of temperature on rate constant?Show solution
Answer:

The rate constant of a reaction increases with increase in temperature.

According to the Arrhenius equation:
k=AeEa/RTk = A\,e^{-E_a/RT}

As temperature TT increases, the exponential term eEa/RTe^{-E_a/RT} increases (becomes less negative in exponent), so kk increases. It has been found experimentally that for most reactions, the rate constant nearly doubles for every 10K10\,\text{K} rise in temperature. This is because at higher temperatures, more molecules possess energy equal to or greater than the activation energy EaE_a.
3.8The rate of the chemical reaction doubles for an increase of 10K in absolute temperature from 298K. Calculate Eₐ.Show solution
Given:
- T1=298KT_1 = 298\,\text{K}, T2=308KT_2 = 308\,\text{K}
- k2=2k1k_2 = 2k_1 (rate doubles)

Formula (Arrhenius equation in two-temperature form):
logk2k1=Ea2.303R(T2T1T1T2)\log\frac{k_2}{k_1} = \frac{E_a}{2.303\,R}\left(\frac{T_2 - T_1}{T_1 T_2}\right)

Substituting values:
log2=Ea2.303×8.314(308298298×308)\log 2 = \frac{E_a}{2.303 \times 8.314}\left(\frac{308 - 298}{298 \times 308}\right)
0.3010=Ea19.147×10917840.3010 = \frac{E_a}{19.147} \times \frac{10}{91784}
0.3010=Ea×1019.147×917840.3010 = \frac{E_a \times 10}{19.147 \times 91784}
0.3010=Ea1.757×1050.3010 = \frac{E_a}{1.757 \times 10^5}
Ea=0.3010×1.757×105E_a = 0.3010 \times 1.757 \times 10^5
Ea=52,897J mol152.9kJ mol1E_a = 52,897\,\text{J mol}^{-1} \approx 52.9\,\text{kJ mol}^{-1}

Answer: Ea52.9kJ mol1E_a \approx 52.9\,\text{kJ mol}^{-1}
3.9The activation energy for the reaction 2HI(g) → H₂ + I₂(g) is 209.5 kJ mol⁻¹ at 581K. Calculate the fraction of molecules of reactants having energy equal to or greater than activation energy.Show solution
Given:
- Ea=209.5kJ mol1=209500J mol1E_a = 209.5\,\text{kJ mol}^{-1} = 209500\,\text{J mol}^{-1}
- T=581KT = 581\,\text{K}
- R=8.314J K1mol1R = 8.314\,\text{J K}^{-1}\text{mol}^{-1}

Formula:
The fraction of molecules having energy Ea\geq E_a is:
x=eEa/RTx = e^{-E_a/RT}

Taking logarithm:
lnx=EaRT=2095008.314×581\ln x = -\frac{E_a}{RT} = -\frac{209500}{8.314 \times 581}
=2095004830.4=43.37= -\frac{209500}{4830.4} = -43.37

logx=43.372.303=18.83\log x = \frac{-43.37}{2.303} = -18.83

x=antilog(18.83)=1018.83x = \text{antilog}(-18.83) = 10^{-18.83}
=1.471×1019= 1.471 \times 10^{-19}

Answer: The fraction of molecules having energy equal to or greater than activation energy =1.471×1019= 1.471 \times 10^{-19}.

Exercises

3.1From the rate expression for the following reactions, determine their order of reaction and the dimensions of the rate constants.
(i) 3NO(g) → N₂O(g); Rate = k[NO]²
(ii) H₂O₂(aq) + 3I⁻(aq) + 2H⁺ → 2H₂O(l) + I₃⁻; Rate = k[H₂O₂][I⁻]
(iii) CH₃CHO(g) → CH₄(g) + CO(g); Rate = k[CH₃CHO]^(3/2)
(iv) C₂H₅Cl(g) → C₂H₄(g) + HCl(g); Rate = k[C₂H₅Cl]
Show solution
Concept: Order of reaction = sum of powers of concentration terms in rate law. Units of kk are derived from: Rate=k[conc]n\text{Rate} = k[\text{conc}]^n, so k=Rate[conc]n=mol L1s1(mol L1)n=mol1nLn1s1k = \dfrac{\text{Rate}}{[\text{conc}]^n} = \dfrac{\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}}{(\text{mol L}^{-1})^n} = \text{mol}^{1-n}\text{L}^{n-1}\text{s}^{-1}

(i) Rate =k[NO]2= k[\text{NO}]^2
- Order = 2 (second order)
- Units of kk: k=mol L1s1(mol L1)2=mol L1s1mol2L2=mol1Ls1k = \frac{\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}}{(\text{mol L}^{-1})^2} = \frac{\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}}{\text{mol}^2\text{L}^{-2}} = \text{mol}^{-1}\text{L}\,\text{s}^{-1}

(ii) Rate =k[H2O2][I]= k[\text{H}_2\text{O}_2][\text{I}^-]
- Order = 1 + 1 = 2 (second order)
- Units of kk: k=mol L1s1(mol L1)2=mol1Ls1k = \frac{\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}}{(\text{mol L}^{-1})^2} = \text{mol}^{-1}\text{L}\,\text{s}^{-1}

(iii) Rate =k[CH3CHO]3/2= k[\text{CH}_3\text{CHO}]^{3/2}
- Order = 3/2 = 1.5 (1.5 order)
- Units of kk: k=mol L1s1(mol L1)3/2=mol13/2L3/21s1=mol1/2L1/2s1k = \frac{\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}}{(\text{mol L}^{-1})^{3/2}} = \text{mol}^{1-3/2}\text{L}^{3/2-1}\text{s}^{-1} = \text{mol}^{-1/2}\text{L}^{1/2}\text{s}^{-1}

(iv) Rate =k[C2H5Cl]= k[\text{C}_2\text{H}_5\text{Cl}]
- Order = 1 (first order)
- Units of kk: k=mol L1s1mol L1=s1k = \frac{\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}}{\text{mol L}^{-1}} = \text{s}^{-1}
3.2For the reaction: 2A + B → A₂B, the rate = k[A][B]² with k = 2.0 × 10⁻⁶ mol⁻² L² s⁻¹. Calculate the initial rate of the reaction when [A] = 0.1 mol L⁻¹, [B] = 0.2 mol L⁻¹. Calculate the rate of reaction after [A] is reduced to 0.06 mol L⁻¹.Show solution
Given:
- Rate =k[A][B]2= k[A][B]^2
- k=2.0×106mol2L2s1k = 2.0 \times 10^{-6}\,\text{mol}^{-2}\text{L}^2\text{s}^{-1}
- Initial: [A]=0.1mol L1[A] = 0.1\,\text{mol L}^{-1}, [B]=0.2mol L1[B] = 0.2\,\text{mol L}^{-1}

Part 1 – Initial rate:
r1=k[A][B]2=2.0×106×0.1×(0.2)2r_1 = k[A][B]^2 = 2.0 \times 10^{-6} \times 0.1 \times (0.2)^2
=2.0×106×0.1×0.04= 2.0 \times 10^{-6} \times 0.1 \times 0.04
=2.0×106×4×103= 2.0 \times 10^{-6} \times 4 \times 10^{-3}
=8.0×109mol L1s1= 8.0 \times 10^{-9}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}

Part 2 – Rate when [A] is reduced to 0.06 mol L⁻¹:

The reaction is 2A+BA2B2\text{A} + \text{B} \rightarrow \text{A}_2\text{B}.

Decrease in [A]=0.10.06=0.04mol L1[A] = 0.1 - 0.06 = 0.04\,\text{mol L}^{-1}

Since stoichiometry: 2 mol A reacts with 1 mol B,
Decrease in [B]=0.042=0.02mol L1\text{Decrease in }[B] = \frac{0.04}{2} = 0.02\,\text{mol L}^{-1}
[B]new=0.20.02=0.18mol L1[B]_{\text{new}} = 0.2 - 0.02 = 0.18\,\text{mol L}^{-1}

r2=k[A]new[B]new2=2.0×106×0.06×(0.18)2r_2 = k[A]_{\text{new}}[B]_{\text{new}}^2 = 2.0 \times 10^{-6} \times 0.06 \times (0.18)^2
=2.0×106×0.06×0.0324= 2.0 \times 10^{-6} \times 0.06 \times 0.0324
=2.0×106×1.944×103= 2.0 \times 10^{-6} \times 1.944 \times 10^{-3}
=3.888×109mol L1s1= 3.888 \times 10^{-9}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}
3.89×109mol L1s1\approx 3.89 \times 10^{-9}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}

Answer:
- Initial rate =8.0×109mol L1s1= 8.0 \times 10^{-9}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}
- Rate after [A][A] reduces to 0.06mol L10.06\,\text{mol L}^{-1} =3.89×109mol L1s1= 3.89 \times 10^{-9}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}
3.3The decomposition of NH₃ on platinum surface is zero order reaction. What are the rates of production of N₂ and H₂ if k = 2.5 × 10⁻⁴ mol⁻¹ L s⁻¹?Show solution
Given:
- Reaction: 2NH3PtN2+3H22\text{NH}_3 \xrightarrow{\text{Pt}} \text{N}_2 + 3\text{H}_2
- Zero order reaction, k=2.5×104mol L1s1k = 2.5 \times 10^{-4}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}

For zero order: Rate =k=2.5×104mol L1s1= k = 2.5 \times 10^{-4}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}

This is the rate of disappearance of NH3\text{NH}_3:
12d[NH3]dt=k-\frac{1}{2}\frac{d[\text{NH}_3]}{dt} = k

Rate of production of N₂:
d[N2]dt=k2×212\frac{d[\text{N}_2]}{dt} = \frac{k}{2} \times 2 \cdot \frac{1}{2}

Using stoichiometry: Rate=12d[NH3]dt=d[N2]dt=13d[H2]dt\text{Rate} = -\frac{1}{2}\frac{d[\text{NH}_3]}{dt} = \frac{d[\text{N}_2]}{dt} = \frac{1}{3}\frac{d[\text{H}_2]}{dt}

So:
d[N2]dt=k=2.5×104mol L1s1\frac{d[\text{N}_2]}{dt} = k = 2.5 \times 10^{-4}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}

Rate of production of H₂:
d[H2]dt=3k=3×2.5×104=7.5×104mol L1s1\frac{d[\text{H}_2]}{dt} = 3k = 3 \times 2.5 \times 10^{-4} = 7.5 \times 10^{-4}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}

Answer:
- Rate of production of N2=2.5×104mol L1s1\text{N}_2 = 2.5 \times 10^{-4}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}
- Rate of production of H2=7.5×104mol L1s1\text{H}_2 = 7.5 \times 10^{-4}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}
3.4The decomposition of dimethyl ether leads to the formation of CH₄, H₂ and CO and the reaction rate is given by Rate = k[CH₃OCH₃]^(3/2). The rate of reaction is followed by increase in pressure in a closed vessel, so the rate can also be expressed in terms of the partial pressure of dimethyl ether, i.e., Rate = k(p_{CH₃OCH₃})^(3/2). If the pressure is measured in bar and time in minutes, then what are the units of rate and rate constants?Show solution
Given:
- Rate =k(pCH3OCH3)3/2= k\,(p_{\text{CH}_3\text{OCH}_3})^{3/2}
- Pressure in bar, time in minutes

Units of Rate:
Rate=change in pressuretime=bar min1\text{Rate} = \frac{\text{change in pressure}}{\text{time}} = \text{bar min}^{-1}

Units of rate constant kk:
k=Rate(pressure)3/2=bar min1(bar)3/2=bar13/2min1=bar1/2min1k = \frac{\text{Rate}}{(\text{pressure})^{3/2}} = \frac{\text{bar min}^{-1}}{(\text{bar})^{3/2}} = \text{bar}^{1-3/2}\,\text{min}^{-1} = \text{bar}^{-1/2}\,\text{min}^{-1}

Answer:
- Units of rate =bar min1= \text{bar min}^{-1}
- Units of rate constant k=bar1/2min1k = \text{bar}^{-1/2}\,\text{min}^{-1}
3.5Mention the factors that affect the rate of a chemical reaction.Show solution
The following factors affect the rate of a chemical reaction:

1. Concentration of reactants: Rate generally increases with increase in concentration of reactants (more molecules available for collision).

2. Temperature: Rate increases with increase in temperature. For most reactions, rate nearly doubles for every 10K10\,\text{K} rise in temperature (Arrhenius equation: k=AeEa/RTk = Ae^{-E_a/RT}).

3. Presence of a catalyst: A catalyst provides an alternate pathway with lower activation energy, thereby increasing the rate of reaction without being consumed.

4. Nature of reactants: Physical state, surface area (for heterogeneous reactions), and bond types influence the rate.

5. Pressure (for gaseous reactions): Increasing pressure increases concentration of gaseous reactants, thus increasing the rate.

6. Surface area: For heterogeneous reactions, finely divided solids (larger surface area) react faster.
3.6A reaction is second order with respect to a reactant. How is the rate of reaction affected if the concentration of the reactant is (i) doubled (ii) reduced to half?Show solution
Given: Rate =k[A]2= k[A]^2 (second order with respect to reactant A)

(i) When concentration is doubled ([A]new=2[A][A]_{\text{new}} = 2[A]):
rnew=k(2[A])2=4k[A]2=4rr_{\text{new}} = k(2[A])^2 = 4k[A]^2 = 4\,r
rnewr=4\frac{r_{\text{new}}}{r} = 4
The rate becomes 4 times the original rate.

(ii) When concentration is reduced to half ([A]new=[A]2[A]_{\text{new}} = \dfrac{[A]}{2}):
rnew=k([A]2)2=k[A]24=r4r_{\text{new}} = k\left(\frac{[A]}{2}\right)^2 = \frac{k[A]^2}{4} = \frac{r}{4}
rnewr=14\frac{r_{\text{new}}}{r} = \frac{1}{4}
The rate becomes one-fourth of the original rate.
3.7What is the effect of temperature on the rate constant of a reaction? How can this effect of temperature on rate constant be represented quantitatively?Show solution
Effect of temperature on rate constant:

The rate constant of a reaction increases with increase in temperature. Experimentally, it is found that for most reactions, the rate constant approximately doubles for every 10 K rise in temperature.

Quantitative representation — Arrhenius Equation:

The effect of temperature on rate constant is given by the Arrhenius equation:
k=AeEa/RTk = A\,e^{-E_a/RT}

where:
- kk = rate constant
- AA = Arrhenius factor (pre-exponential factor or frequency factor)
- EaE_a = activation energy (J mol⁻¹)
- RR = gas constant =8.314J K1mol1= 8.314\,\text{J K}^{-1}\text{mol}^{-1}
- TT = absolute temperature (K)

Taking logarithm:
lnk=lnAEaRT\ln k = \ln A - \frac{E_a}{RT}
logk=logAEa2.303RT\log k = \log A - \frac{E_a}{2.303\,RT}

For two temperatures T1T_1 and T2T_2:
logk2k1=Ea2.303R(T2T1T1T2)\log\frac{k_2}{k_1} = \frac{E_a}{2.303\,R}\left(\frac{T_2 - T_1}{T_1 T_2}\right)

As TT increases, eEa/RTe^{-E_a/RT} increases, so kk increases.
3.8In a pseudo first order reaction in water, the following results were obtained:
t/s: 0, 30, 60, 90
[A]/mol L⁻¹: 0.55, 0.31, 0.17, 0.085
Calculate the average rate of reaction between the time interval 30 to 60 seconds.
Show solution
Given:
- At t=30st = 30\,\text{s}: [A]=0.31mol L1[A] = 0.31\,\text{mol L}^{-1}
- At t=60st = 60\,\text{s}: [A]=0.17mol L1[A] = 0.17\,\text{mol L}^{-1}

Formula:
Average rate=Δ[A]Δt=[A]60[A]306030\text{Average rate} = -\frac{\Delta[A]}{\Delta t} = -\frac{[A]_{60} - [A]_{30}}{60 - 30}

Calculation:
Average rate=(0.170.31)mol L1(6030)s\text{Average rate} = -\frac{(0.17 - 0.31)\,\text{mol L}^{-1}}{(60 - 30)\,\text{s}}
=0.1430mol L1s1= -\frac{-0.14}{30}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}
=0.1430=4.67×103mol L1s1= \frac{0.14}{30} = 4.67 \times 10^{-3}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}

Answer: Average rate =4.67×103mol L1s1= 4.67 \times 10^{-3}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{s}^{-1}
3.9A reaction is first order in A and second order in B.
(i) Write the differential rate equation.
(ii) How is the rate affected on increasing the concentration of B three times?
(iii) How is the rate affected when the concentrations of both A and B are doubled?
Show solution
Given: First order in A, second order in B.

(i) Differential rate equation:
Rate=d[A]dt=k[A]1[B]2=k[A][B]2\text{Rate} = -\frac{d[A]}{dt} = k[A]^1[B]^2 = k[A][B]^2

(ii) Effect of tripling [B]:

Original rate: r=k[A][B]2r = k[A][B]^2

New rate when [B]new=3[B][B]_{\text{new}} = 3[B]:
rnew=k[A](3[B])2=9k[A][B]2=9rr_{\text{new}} = k[A](3[B])^2 = 9k[A][B]^2 = 9\,r

The rate increases 9 times.

(iii) Effect of doubling both [A] and [B]:

New rate when [A]new=2[A][A]_{\text{new}} = 2[A] and [B]new=2[B][B]_{\text{new}} = 2[B]:
rnew=k(2[A])(2[B])2=k×2[A]×4[B]2=8k[A][B]2=8rr_{\text{new}} = k(2[A])(2[B])^2 = k \times 2[A] \times 4[B]^2 = 8k[A][B]^2 = 8\,r

The rate increases 8 times.
3.10In a reaction between A and B, the initial rate of reaction (r₀) was measured for different initial concentrations of A and B as given below:
[A]/mol L⁻¹: 0.20, 0.20, 0.40
[B]/mol L⁻¹: 0.30, 0.10, 0.05
r₀/mol L⁻¹s⁻¹: 5.07×10⁻⁵, 5.07×10⁻⁵, 1.43×10⁻⁴
What is the order of the reaction with respect to A and B?
Show solution
Let Rate =k[A]m[B]n= k[A]^m[B]^n

Finding order with respect to B (comparing experiments 1 and 2):

[A][A] is same (0.20) in both; [B][B] changes from 0.30 to 0.10.
r1r2=k(0.20)m(0.30)nk(0.20)m(0.10)n=(0.300.10)n=3n\frac{r_1}{r_2} = \frac{k(0.20)^m(0.30)^n}{k(0.20)^m(0.10)^n} = \left(\frac{0.30}{0.10}\right)^n = 3^n
5.07×1055.07×105=1=3n\frac{5.07 \times 10^{-5}}{5.07 \times 10^{-5}} = 1 = 3^n
n=0\Rightarrow n = 0

Order with respect to B = 0.

Finding order with respect to A (comparing experiments 2 and 3):

[B][B] changes but since n=0n = 0, it doesn't matter. Using experiments 2 and 3:
r3r2=k(0.40)m(0.05)0k(0.20)m(0.10)0=(0.400.20)m=2m\frac{r_3}{r_2} = \frac{k(0.40)^m(0.05)^0}{k(0.20)^m(0.10)^0} = \left(\frac{0.40}{0.20}\right)^m = 2^m
1.43×1045.07×105=2.822m\frac{1.43 \times 10^{-4}}{5.07 \times 10^{-5}} = 2.82 \approx 2^m
2m2.8221.52^m \approx 2.82 \approx 2^{1.5}
m1.5\Rightarrow m \approx 1.5

Verification: 21.5=22=2.8282.822^{1.5} = 2\sqrt{2} = 2.828 \approx 2.82

Answer:
- Order with respect to A =1.5= 1.5 (or 32\dfrac{3}{2})
- Order with respect to B =0= 0
- Overall order =1.5= 1.5
3.11The following results have been obtained during the kinetic studies of the reaction: 2A + B → C + D
Experiment I: [A]=0.1, [B]=0.1, rate=6.0×10⁻³
Experiment II: [A]=0.3, [B]=0.2, rate=7.2×10⁻²
Experiment III: [A]=0.3, [B]=0.4, rate=2.88×10⁻¹
Experiment IV: [A]=0.4, [B]=0.1, rate=2.40×10⁻²
Determine the rate law and the rate constant for the reaction.
Show solution
Let Rate =k[A]m[B]n= k[A]^m[B]^n

Finding order with respect to B (comparing experiments II and III):
[A][A] is same (0.3):
rIIIrII=([B]III[B]II)n=(0.40.2)n=2n\frac{r_{III}}{r_{II}} = \left(\frac{[B]_{III}}{[B]_{II}}\right)^n = \left(\frac{0.4}{0.2}\right)^n = 2^n
2.88×1017.2×102=4=2nn=2\frac{2.88 \times 10^{-1}}{7.2 \times 10^{-2}} = 4 = 2^n \Rightarrow n = 2

Order with respect to B = 2.

Finding order with respect to A (comparing experiments I and IV):
[B][B] is same (0.1):
rIVrI=([A]IV[A]I)m=(0.40.1)m=4m\frac{r_{IV}}{r_I} = \left(\frac{[A]_{IV}}{[A]_I}\right)^m = \left(\frac{0.4}{0.1}\right)^m = 4^m
2.40×1026.0×103=4=4mm=1\frac{2.40 \times 10^{-2}}{6.0 \times 10^{-3}} = 4 = 4^m \Rightarrow m = 1

Order with respect to A = 1.

Rate law: Rate=k[A][B]2\text{Rate} = k[A][B]^2

Calculating rate constant kk (using Experiment I):
k=Rate[A][B]2=6.0×1030.1×(0.1)2=6.0×1030.1×0.01=6.0×103103=6.0mol2L2min1k = \frac{\text{Rate}}{[A][B]^2} = \frac{6.0 \times 10^{-3}}{0.1 \times (0.1)^2} = \frac{6.0 \times 10^{-3}}{0.1 \times 0.01} = \frac{6.0 \times 10^{-3}}{10^{-3}} = 6.0\,\text{mol}^{-2}\text{L}^2\text{min}^{-1}

Verification with Experiment II:
k=7.2×1020.3×(0.2)2=7.2×1020.3×0.04=7.2×1020.012=6.0mol2L2min1k = \frac{7.2 \times 10^{-2}}{0.3 \times (0.2)^2} = \frac{7.2 \times 10^{-2}}{0.3 \times 0.04} = \frac{7.2 \times 10^{-2}}{0.012} = 6.0\,\text{mol}^{-2}\text{L}^2\text{min}^{-1}

Answer:
- Rate law: Rate=k[A][B]2\text{Rate} = k[A][B]^2
- k=6.0mol2L2min1k = 6.0\,\text{mol}^{-2}\text{L}^2\text{min}^{-1}
3.12The reaction between A and B is first order with respect to A and zero order with respect to B. Fill in the blanks in the following table:
Experiment I: [A]=0.1, [B]=0.1, rate=2.0×10⁻²
Experiment II: [A]=?, [B]=0.2, rate=4.0×10⁻²
Experiment III: [A]=0.4, [B]=0.4, rate=?
Experiment IV: [A]=?, [B]=0.2, rate=2.0×10⁻²
Show solution
Rate law: Rate =k[A]1[B]0=k[A]= k[A]^1[B]^0 = k[A]

Finding k from Experiment I:
k=Rate[A]=2.0×1020.1=0.2min1k = \frac{\text{Rate}}{[A]} = \frac{2.0 \times 10^{-2}}{0.1} = 0.2\,\text{min}^{-1}

Experiment II: Rate =4.0×102= 4.0 \times 10^{-2}, [B]=0.2[B] = 0.2
[A]=Ratek=4.0×1020.2=0.2mol L1[A] = \frac{\text{Rate}}{k} = \frac{4.0 \times 10^{-2}}{0.2} = 0.2\,\text{mol L}^{-1}

Experiment III: [A]=0.4[A] = 0.4, [B]=0.4[B] = 0.4
Rate=k[A]=0.2×0.4=8.0×102mol L1min1\text{Rate} = k[A] = 0.2 \times 0.4 = 8.0 \times 10^{-2}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}\text{min}^{-1}

Experiment IV: Rate =2.0×102= 2.0 \times 10^{-2}, [B]=0.2[B] = 0.2
[A]=Ratek=2.0×1020.2=0.1mol L1[A] = \frac{\text{Rate}}{k} = \frac{2.0 \times 10^{-2}}{0.2} = 0.1\,\text{mol L}^{-1}

Completed Table:

| Experiment | [A]/mol L⁻¹ | [B]/mol L⁻¹ | Rate/mol L⁻¹ min⁻¹ |
|---|---|---|---|
| I | 0.1 | 0.1 | 2.0×1022.0 \times 10^{-2} |
| II | 0.2 | 0.2 | 4.0×1024.0 \times 10^{-2} |
| III | 0.4 | 0.4 | 8.0×102\mathbf{8.0 \times 10^{-2}} |
| IV | 0.1 | 0.2 | 2.0×1022.0 \times 10^{-2} |
3.13Calculate the half-life of a first order reaction from their rate constants given below:
(i) 200 s⁻¹
(ii) 2 min⁻¹
(iii) 4 years⁻¹
Show solution
Formula for first order half-life:
t1/2=0.693kt_{1/2} = \frac{0.693}{k}

(i) k=200s1k = 200\,\text{s}^{-1}:
t1/2=0.693200=3.465×103s3.47×103st_{1/2} = \frac{0.693}{200} = 3.465 \times 10^{-3}\,\text{s} \approx 3.47 \times 10^{-3}\,\text{s}

(ii) k=2min1k = 2\,\text{min}^{-1}:
t1/2=0.6932=0.3465min0.35mint_{1/2} = \frac{0.693}{2} = 0.3465\,\text{min} \approx 0.35\,\text{min}

(iii) k=4years1k = 4\,\text{years}^{-1}:
t1/2=0.6934=0.173yearst_{1/2} = \frac{0.693}{4} = 0.173\,\text{years}

Answers:
- (i) t1/2=3.47×103st_{1/2} = 3.47 \times 10^{-3}\,\text{s}
- (ii) t1/2=0.35mint_{1/2} = 0.35\,\text{min}
- (iii) t1/2=0.173yearst_{1/2} = 0.173\,\text{years}
3.14The half-life for radioactive decay of ¹⁴C is 5730 years. An archaeological artifact containing wood had only 80% of the ¹⁴C found in a living tree. Estimate the age of the sample.Show solution
Given:
- t1/2=5730yearst_{1/2} = 5730\,\text{years}
- Remaining 14C=80%^{14}\text{C} = 80\% of original, so [R]=0.80[R]0[R] = 0.80\,[R]_0

Step 1: Find rate constant kk:
k=0.693t1/2=0.6935730=1.209×104year1k = \frac{0.693}{t_{1/2}} = \frac{0.693}{5730} = 1.209 \times 10^{-4}\,\text{year}^{-1}

Step 2: Use first order integrated rate equation:
t=2.303klog[R]0[R]=2.3031.209×104log[R]00.80[R]0t = \frac{2.303}{k}\log\frac{[R]_0}{[R]} = \frac{2.303}{1.209 \times 10^{-4}}\log\frac{[R]_0}{0.80[R]_0}
=2.3031.209×104×log(10.80)= \frac{2.303}{1.209 \times 10^{-4}} \times \log\left(\frac{1}{0.80}\right)
=2.3031.209×104×log(1.25)= \frac{2.303}{1.209 \times 10^{-4}} \times \log(1.25)
=2.3031.209×104×0.09691= \frac{2.303}{1.209 \times 10^{-4}} \times 0.09691
=19035×0.09691= 19035 \times 0.09691
1845years\approx 1845\,\text{years}

Answer: The age of the sample is approximately 1845 years.
3.15The experimental data for decomposition of N₂O₅ [2N₂O₅ → 4NO₂ + O₂] in gas phase at 318K are given below:
t/s: 0, 400, 800, 1200, 1600, 2000, 2400, 2800, 3200
10² × [N₂O₅]/mol L⁻¹: 1.63, 1.36, 1.14, 0.93, 0.78, 0.64, 0.53, 0.43, 0.35
(i) Plot [N₂O₅] against t.
(ii) Find the half-life period for the reaction.
(iii) Draw a graph between log[N₂O₅] and t.
(iv) What is the rate law?
(v) Calculate the rate constant.
(vi) Calculate the half-life period from k and compare it with (ii).
Show solution
Data Table:

| tt/s | [N2O5]×102[\text{N}_2\text{O}_5] \times 10^2/mol L⁻¹ | log[N2O5]\log[\text{N}_2\text{O}_5] |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1.63 | 1.788-1.788 |
| 400 | 1.36 | 1.866-1.866 |
| 800 | 1.14 | 1.943-1.943 |
| 1200 | 0.93 | 2.031-2.031 |
| 1600 | 0.78 | 2.108-2.108 |
| 2000 | 0.64 | 2.194-2.194 |
| 2400 | 0.53 | 2.276-2.276 |
| 2800 | 0.43 | 2.367-2.367 |
| 3200 | 0.35 | 2.456-2.456 |

(i) Plot [N₂O₅] vs t:
Plot [N2O5][\text{N}_2\text{O}_5] on y-axis and tt on x-axis. The curve is exponential (decreasing), confirming first order kinetics.

(ii) Half-life from graph:
Initial concentration =1.63×102mol L1= 1.63 \times 10^{-2}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}
Half of initial =0.815×102mol L1= 0.815 \times 10^{-2}\,\text{mol L}^{-1}
From the graph, at [N2O5]=0.815×102[\text{N}_2\text{O}_5] = 0.815 \times 10^{-2}, t1440st \approx 1440\,\text{s}
t1/21440st_{1/2} \approx 1440\,\text{s}

(iii) Graph of log[N₂O₅] vs t:
The values of log[N2O5]\log[\text{N}_2\text{O}_5] decrease linearly with time, confirming first order reaction. Plot log[N2O5]\log[\text{N}_2\text{O}_5] on y-axis and tt on x-axis — a straight line is obtained.

(iv) Rate law:
Since log[N2O5]\log[\text{N}_2\text{O}_5] vs tt is linear, the reaction is first order.
Rate=k[N2O5]\text{Rate} = k[\text{N}_2\text{O}_5]

(v) Calculating rate constant kk:
For first order: slope of log[N2O5]\log[\text{N}_2\text{O}_5] vs tt graph =k/2.303= -k/2.303

Using two points (0 s and 3200 s):
slope=2.456(1.788)32000=0.6683200=2.088×104s1\text{slope} = \frac{-2.456 - (-1.788)}{3200 - 0} = \frac{-0.668}{3200} = -2.088 \times 10^{-4}\,\text{s}^{-1}
k=2.303×slope=2.303×2.088×104k = -2.303 \times \text{slope} = 2.303 \times 2.088 \times 10^{-4}
k=4.81×104s1k = 4.81 \times 10^{-4}\,\text{s}^{-1}

(vi) Half-life from k:
t1/2=0.693k=0.6934.81×104=1440st_{1/2} = \frac{0.693}{k} = \frac{0.693}{4.81 \times 10^{-4}} = 1440\,\text{s}

Comparison: The half-life calculated from kk (1440s\approx 1440\,\text{s}) matches the value obtained from the graph in part (ii). This confirms the first order nature of the reaction.
3.16The rate constant for a first order reaction is 60 s⁻¹. How much time will it take to reduce the initial concentration of the reactant to its 1/16th value?Show solution
Given:
- k=60s1k = 60\,\text{s}^{-1}
- [R]=[R]016[R] = \dfrac{[R]_0}{16}, i.e., [R]0[R]=16\dfrac{[R]_0}{[R]} = 16

Formula:
t=2.303klog[R]0[R]t = \frac{2.303}{k}\log\frac{[R]_0}{[R]}

Calculation:
t=2.30360log16t = \frac{2.303}{60}\log 16
=2.30360×log24= \frac{2.303}{60} \times \log 2^4
=2.30360×4×log2= \frac{2.303}{60} \times 4 \times \log 2
=2.30360×4×0.3010= \frac{2.303}{60} \times 4 \times 0.3010
=2.303×1.20460= \frac{2.303 \times 1.204}{60}
=2.77360=4.62×102s= \frac{2.773}{60} = 4.62 \times 10^{-2}\,\text{s}

Answer: Time required =4.62×102s= 4.62 \times 10^{-2}\,\text{s}
3.17During nuclear explosion, one of the products is ⁹⁰Sr with half-life of 28.1 years. If 1 μg of ⁹⁰Sr was absorbed in the bones of a newly born baby instead of calcium, how much of it will remain after 10 years and 60 years if it is not lost metabolically.Show solution
Given:
- t1/2=28.1yearst_{1/2} = 28.1\,\text{years}
- Initial amount =1μg= 1\,\mu\text{g}

Step 1: Find rate constant:
k=0.693t1/2=0.69328.1=2.466×102year1k = \frac{0.693}{t_{1/2}} = \frac{0.693}{28.1} = 2.466 \times 10^{-2}\,\text{year}^{-1}

After 10 years:
t=2.303klog[R]0[R]t = \frac{2.303}{k}\log\frac{[R]_0}{[R]}
log[R]0[R]=k×t2.303=2.466×102×102.303=0.24662.303=0.1071\log\frac{[R]_0}{[R]} = \frac{k \times t}{2.303} = \frac{2.466 \times 10^{-2} \times 10}{2.303} = \frac{0.2466}{2.303} = 0.1071
[R]0[R]=antilog(0.1071)=1.28\frac{[R]_0}{[R]} = \text{antilog}(0.1071) = 1.28
[R]=11.28=0.7813μg[R] = \frac{1}{1.28} = 0.7813\,\mu\text{g}

After 60 years:
log[R]0[R]=2.466×102×602.303=1.47962.303=0.6425\log\frac{[R]_0}{[R]} = \frac{2.466 \times 10^{-2} \times 60}{2.303} = \frac{1.4796}{2.303} = 0.6425
[R]0[R]=antilog(0.6425)=4.39\frac{[R]_0}{[R]} = \text{antilog}(0.6425) = 4.39
[R]=14.39=0.2278μg[R] = \frac{1}{4.39} = 0.2278\,\mu\text{g}

Answer:
- Amount remaining after 10 years 0.7813μg\approx 0.7813\,\mu\text{g}
- Amount remaining after 60 years 0.2278μg\approx 0.2278\,\mu\text{g}
3.18For a first order reaction, show that time required for 99% completion is twice the time required for the completion of 90% of reaction.Show solution
For first order reaction:
t=2.303klog[R]0[R]t = \frac{2.303}{k}\log\frac{[R]_0}{[R]}

Time for 90% completion (t90t_{90}):

If 90% is completed, 10% remains: [R]=0.10[R]0[R] = 0.10\,[R]_0
t90=2.303klog[R]00.10[R]0=2.303klog10=2.303k×1=2.303kt_{90} = \frac{2.303}{k}\log\frac{[R]_0}{0.10[R]_0} = \frac{2.303}{k}\log 10 = \frac{2.303}{k} \times 1 = \frac{2.303}{k}

Time for 99% completion (t99t_{99}):

If 99% is completed, 1% remains: [R]=0.01[R]0[R] = 0.01\,[R]_0
t99=2.303klog[R]00.01[R]0=2.303klog100=2.303k×2=4.606kt_{99} = \frac{2.303}{k}\log\frac{[R]_0}{0.01[R]_0} = \frac{2.303}{k}\log 100 = \frac{2.303}{k} \times 2 = \frac{4.606}{k}

Ratio:
t99t90=4.606/k2.303/k=2\frac{t_{99}}{t_{90}} = \frac{4.606/k}{2.303/k} = 2

t99=2t90\boxed{t_{99} = 2\,t_{90}}

Hence proved that time required for 99% completion is twice the time required for 90% completion.
3.19A first order reaction takes 40 min for 30% decomposition. Calculate t₁/₂.Show solution
Given:
- t=40mint = 40\,\text{min}
- 30% decomposed, so 70% remains: [R]=0.70[R]0[R] = 0.70\,[R]_0

Step 1: Find k:
k=2.303tlog[R]0[R]=2.30340log[R]00.70[R]0k = \frac{2.303}{t}\log\frac{[R]_0}{[R]} = \frac{2.303}{40}\log\frac{[R]_0}{0.70[R]_0}
=2.30340log(10.70)=2.30340×log(1.4286)= \frac{2.303}{40}\log\left(\frac{1}{0.70}\right) = \frac{2.303}{40} \times \log(1.4286)
=2.30340×0.1549= \frac{2.303}{40} \times 0.1549
=0.356740=8.918×103min1= \frac{0.3567}{40} = 8.918 \times 10^{-3}\,\text{min}^{-1}

Step 2: Calculate t1/2t_{1/2}:
t1/2=0.693k=0.6938.918×103=77.7mint_{1/2} = \frac{0.693}{k} = \frac{0.693}{8.918 \times 10^{-3}} = 77.7\,\text{min}

Answer: t1/277.7mint_{1/2} \approx 77.7\,\text{min}
3.20For the decomposition of azoisopropane to hexane and nitrogen at 543 K, the following data are obtained:
t(sec): 0, 360, 720
P(mm of Hg): 35.0, 54.0, 63.0
Calculate the rate constant.
Show solution
Reaction: (CH3)2CHN=NCH(CH3)2N2+C6H14(\text{CH}_3)_2\text{CHN}=\text{NCH}(\text{CH}_3)_2 \rightarrow \text{N}_2 + \text{C}_6\text{H}_{14}

For every mole of azoisopropane decomposed, 2 moles of products are formed.

Let initial pressure =P0=35.0mm Hg= P_0 = 35.0\,\text{mm Hg}, and pressure decrease of azoisopropane at time t=pt = p.

Ptotal=(P0p)+p+p=P0+pP_{\text{total}} = (P_0 - p) + p + p = P_0 + p
p=PtotalP0p = P_{\text{total}} - P_0
Pazoisopropane=P0p=P0(PtotalP0)=2P0PtotalP_{\text{azoisopropane}} = P_0 - p = P_0 - (P_{\text{total}} - P_0) = 2P_0 - P_{\text{total}}

At t=360st = 360\,\text{s}:
Pazoisopropane=2(35.0)54.0=70.054.0=16.0mm HgP_{\text{azoisopropane}} = 2(35.0) - 54.0 = 70.0 - 54.0 = 16.0\,\text{mm Hg}

At t=720st = 720\,\text{s}:
Pazoisopropane=2(35.0)63.0=70.063.0=7.0mm HgP_{\text{azoisopropane}} = 2(35.0) - 63.0 = 70.0 - 63.0 = 7.0\,\text{mm Hg}

Using first order rate equation:
k=2.303tlogP0Ptk = \frac{2.303}{t}\log\frac{P_0}{P_t}

At t=360st = 360\,\text{s}:
k=2.303360log35.016.0=2.303360×log(2.1875)k = \frac{2.303}{360}\log\frac{35.0}{16.0} = \frac{2.303}{360} \times \log(2.1875)
=2.303360×0.3398=2.175×103s1= \frac{2.303}{360} \times 0.3398 = 2.175 \times 10^{-3}\,\text{s}^{-1}

At t=720st = 720\,\text{s}:
k=2.303720log35.07.0=2.303720×log5k = \frac{2.303}{720}\log\frac{35.0}{7.0} = \frac{2.303}{720} \times \log 5
=2.303720×0.6990=2.235×103s1= \frac{2.303}{720} \times 0.6990 = 2.235 \times 10^{-3}\,\text{s}^{-1}

Average kk:
k(2.175+2.235)×10322.21×103s1k \approx \frac{(2.175 + 2.235) \times 10^{-3}}{2} \approx 2.21 \times 10^{-3}\,\text{s}^{-1}

Answer: k2.21×103s1k \approx 2.21 \times 10^{-3}\,\text{s}^{-1}
3.21The following data were obtained during the first order thermal decomposition of SO₂Cl₂ at a constant volume:
SO₂Cl₂(g) → SO₂(g) + Cl₂(g)
Experiment 1: t=0, P=0.5 atm
Experiment 2: t=100 s, P=0.6 atm
Calculate the rate of the reaction when total pressure is 0.65 atm.
Show solution
Reaction: SO2Cl2(g)SO2(g)+Cl2(g)\text{SO}_2\text{Cl}_2(\text{g}) \rightarrow \text{SO}_2(\text{g}) + \text{Cl}_2(\text{g})

Let initial pressure of SO2Cl2=P0=0.5atm\text{SO}_2\text{Cl}_2 = P_0 = 0.5\,\text{atm}, and decrease in pressure =p= p at time tt.

Ptotal=(P0p)+p+p=P0+pP_{\text{total}} = (P_0 - p) + p + p = P_0 + p
p=PtotalP0p = P_{\text{total}} - P_0
PSO2Cl2=P0p=2P0PtotalP_{\text{SO}_2\text{Cl}_2} = P_0 - p = 2P_0 - P_{\text{total}}

At t=100st = 100\,\text{s}, Ptotal=0.6atmP_{\text{total}} = 0.6\,\text{atm}:
PSO2Cl2=2(0.5)0.6=1.00.6=0.4atmP_{\text{SO}_2\text{Cl}_2} = 2(0.5) - 0.6 = 1.0 - 0.6 = 0.4\,\text{atm}

Finding rate constant kk:
k=2.303tlogP0Pt=2.303100log0.50.4k = \frac{2.303}{t}\log\frac{P_0}{P_t} = \frac{2.303}{100}\log\frac{0.5}{0.4}
=2.303100×log(1.25)=2.303100×0.09691= \frac{2.303}{100} \times \log(1.25) = \frac{2.303}{100} \times 0.09691
=2.231×103s1= 2.231 \times 10^{-3}\,\text{s}^{-1}

When total pressure =0.65atm= 0.65\,\text{atm}:
PSO2Cl2=2(0.5)0.65=1.00.65=0.35atmP_{\text{SO}_2\text{Cl}_2} = 2(0.5) - 0.65 = 1.0 - 0.65 = 0.35\,\text{atm}

Rate of reaction:
Rate=k×PSO2Cl2=2.231×103×0.35\text{Rate} = k \times P_{\text{SO}_2\text{Cl}_2} = 2.231 \times 10^{-3} \times 0.35
=7.81×104atm s1= 7.81 \times 10^{-4}\,\text{atm s}^{-1}

Answer: Rate of reaction =7.81×104atm s1= 7.81 \times 10^{-4}\,\text{atm s}^{-1}
3.22The rate constant for the decomposition of N₂O₅ at various temperatures is given below:
T/°C: 0, 20, 40, 60, 80
10⁵ × k/s⁻¹: 0.0787, 1.70, 25.7, 178, 2140
Draw a graph between ln k and 1/T and calculate the values of A and Eₐ. Predict the rate constant at 30°C and 50°C.
Show solution
Converting temperatures to Kelvin and calculating ln k:

| T/°C | T/K | 1/T1/T (K⁻¹) | k×105k \times 10^5/s⁻¹ | lnk\ln k |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 273 | 3.663×1033.663 \times 10^{-3} | 0.0787 | 11.75-11.75 |
| 20 | 293 | 3.413×1033.413 \times 10^{-3} | 1.70 | 10.98-10.98 |
| 40 | 313 | 3.195×1033.195 \times 10^{-3} | 25.7 | 10.57-10.57 |
| 60 | 333 | 3.003×1033.003 \times 10^{-3} | 178 | 8.63-8.63 |
| 80 | 353 | 2.833×1032.833 \times 10^{-3} | 2140 | 6.15-6.15 |

Graph: Plot lnk\ln k (y-axis) vs 1/T1/T (x-axis) — a straight line with negative slope.

From Arrhenius equation:
lnk=lnAEaRT\ln k = \ln A - \frac{E_a}{RT}

Slope =Ea/R= -E_a/R

Calculating slope (using extreme points):
slope=6.15(11.75)(2.8333.663)×103=5.600.830×103=6.747×103K\text{slope} = \frac{-6.15 - (-11.75)}{(2.833 - 3.663) \times 10^{-3}} = \frac{5.60}{-0.830 \times 10^{-3}} = -6.747 \times 10^3\,\text{K}

Ea=slope×R=6.747×103×8.314=56,092J mol156.1kJ mol1E_a = -\text{slope} \times R = 6.747 \times 10^3 \times 8.314 = 56,092\,\text{J mol}^{-1} \approx 56.1\,\text{kJ mol}^{-1}

Finding A (using T=273KT = 273\,\text{K}, k=0.0787×105s1k = 0.0787 \times 10^{-5}\,\text{s}^{-1}):
lnA=lnk+EaRT=11.75+560928.314×273\ln A = \ln k + \frac{E_a}{RT} = -11.75 + \frac{56092}{8.314 \times 273}
=11.75+560922269.7=11.75+24.72=12.97= -11.75 + \frac{56092}{2269.7} = -11.75 + 24.72 = 12.97
A=e12.974.3×105s1A = e^{12.97} \approx 4.3 \times 10^5\,\text{s}^{-1}

Rate constant at 30°C (303 K):
logk=logAEa2.303RT=log(4.3×105)560922.303×8.314×303\log k = \log A - \frac{E_a}{2.303RT} = \log(4.3 \times 10^5) - \frac{56092}{2.303 \times 8.314 \times 303}
=5.633560925800.6=5.6339.67=4.037= 5.633 - \frac{56092}{5800.6} = 5.633 - 9.67 = -4.037
k30=104.0379.16×105s1k_{30} = 10^{-4.037} \approx 9.16 \times 10^{-5}\,\text{s}^{-1}

Rate constant at 50°C (323 K):
logk=5.633560922.303×8.314×323=5.633560926183.5=5.6339.07=3.437\log k = 5.633 - \frac{56092}{2.303 \times 8.314 \times 323} = 5.633 - \frac{56092}{6183.5} = 5.633 - 9.07 = -3.437
k50=103.4373.65×104s1k_{50} = 10^{-3.437} \approx 3.65 \times 10^{-4}\,\text{s}^{-1}

Answer:
- Ea56.1kJ mol1E_a \approx 56.1\,\text{kJ mol}^{-1}
- A4.3×105s1A \approx 4.3 \times 10^5\,\text{s}^{-1}
- k30°C9.16×105s1k_{30°C} \approx 9.16 \times 10^{-5}\,\text{s}^{-1}
- k50°C3.65×104s1k_{50°C} \approx 3.65 \times 10^{-4}\,\text{s}^{-1}
3.23The rate constant for the decomposition of hydrocarbons is 2.418 × 10⁻⁵ s⁻¹ at 546 K. If the energy of activation is 179.9 kJ/mol, what will be the value of pre-exponential factor.Show solution
Given:
- k=2.418×105s1k = 2.418 \times 10^{-5}\,\text{s}^{-1}
- T=546KT = 546\,\text{K}
- Ea=179.9kJ mol1=179900J mol1E_a = 179.9\,\text{kJ mol}^{-1} = 179900\,\text{J mol}^{-1}
- R=8.314J K1mol1R = 8.314\,\text{J K}^{-1}\text{mol}^{-1}

Using Arrhenius equation:
logk=logAEa2.303RT\log k = \log A - \frac{E_a}{2.303\,RT}
logA=logk+Ea2.303RT\log A = \log k + \frac{E_a}{2.303\,RT}
=log(2.418×105)+1799002.303×8.314×546= \log(2.418 \times 10^{-5}) + \frac{179900}{2.303 \times 8.314 \times 546}
=(5+log2.418)+17990010445.5= (-5 + \log 2.418) + \frac{179900}{10445.5}
=(5+0.3835)+17.22= (-5 + 0.3835) + 17.22
=4.6165+17.22= -4.6165 + 17.22
=12.60= 12.60
A=1012.60=3.98×1012s1A = 10^{12.60} = 3.98 \times 10^{12}\,\text{s}^{-1}

Answer: Pre-exponential factor A3.98×1012s1A \approx 3.98 \times 10^{12}\,\text{s}^{-1}
3.24Consider a certain reaction A → Products with k = 2.0 × 10⁻² s⁻¹. Calculate the concentration of A remaining after 100 s if the initial concentration of A is 1.0 mol L⁻¹.Show solution
Given:
- k=2.0×102s1k = 2.0 \times 10^{-2}\,\text{s}^{-1} (unit s⁻¹ indicates first order)
- t=100st = 100\,\text{s}
- [A]0=1.0mol L1[A]_0 = 1.0\,\text{mol L}^{-1}

Using first order integrated rate equation:
log[A]0[A]=kt2.303\log\frac{[A]_0}{[A]} = \frac{kt}{2.303}
=2.0×102×1002.303=2.02.303=0.8684= \frac{2.0 \times 10^{-2} \times 100}{2.303} = \frac{2.0}{2.303} = 0.8684
[A]0[A]=antilog(0.8684)=7.389\frac{[A]_0}{[A]} = \text{antilog}(0.8684) = 7.389
[A]=1.07.389=0.1353mol L1[A] = \frac{1.0}{7.389} = 0.1353\,\text{mol L}^{-1}

Answer: Concentration of A remaining after 100 s =0.1353mol L1= 0.1353\,\text{mol L}^{-1}
3.25Sucrose decomposes in acid solution into glucose and fructose according to the first order rate law, with t₁/₂ = 3.00 hours. What fraction of sample of sucrose remains after 8 hours?Show solution
Given:
- t1/2=3.00ht_{1/2} = 3.00\,\text{h}
- t=8ht = 8\,\text{h}

Step 1: Find k:
k=0.693t1/2=0.6933.00=0.231h1k = \frac{0.693}{t_{1/2}} = \frac{0.693}{3.00} = 0.231\,\text{h}^{-1}

Step 2: Find fraction remaining:
log[A]0[A]=kt2.303=0.231×82.303=1.8482.303=0.8024\log\frac{[A]_0}{[A]} = \frac{kt}{2.303} = \frac{0.231 \times 8}{2.303} = \frac{1.848}{2.303} = 0.8024
[A]0[A]=antilog(0.8024)=6.341\frac{[A]_0}{[A]} = \text{antilog}(0.8024) = 6.341
[A][A]0=16.341=0.1577\frac{[A]}{[A]_0} = \frac{1}{6.341} = 0.1577

Answer: The fraction of sucrose remaining after 8 hours 0.158\approx 0.158 (i.e., about 15.8% of the original sample remains).
3.26The decomposition of hydrocarbon follows the equation k = (4.5 × 10¹¹ s⁻¹) e^(−28000K/T). Calculate Eₐ.Show solution
Given:
k=(4.5×1011s1)e28000K/Tk = (4.5 \times 10^{11}\,\text{s}^{-1})\,e^{-28000\,\text{K}/T}

Comparing with Arrhenius equation:
k=AeEa/RTk = A\,e^{-E_a/RT}

We can identify:
EaR=28000K\frac{E_a}{R} = 28000\,\text{K}
Ea=28000K×R=28000×8.314J mol1E_a = 28000\,\text{K} \times R = 28000 \times 8.314\,\text{J mol}^{-1}
Ea=232792J mol1=232.8kJ mol1E_a = 232792\,\text{J mol}^{-1} = 232.8\,\text{kJ mol}^{-1}

Answer: Ea=232.8kJ mol1E_a = 232.8\,\text{kJ mol}^{-1}
3.27The rate constant for the first order decomposition of H₂O₂ is given by the following equation: log k = 14.34 − 1.25 × 10⁴ K/T. Calculate Eₐ for this reaction and at what temperature will its half-period be 256 minutes?Show solution
Given:
logk=14.341.25×104KT\log k = 14.34 - \frac{1.25 \times 10^4\,\text{K}}{T}

Part 1: Calculate Eₐ:

Comparing with: logk=logAEa2.303RT\log k = \log A - \dfrac{E_a}{2.303\,RT}

Ea2.303R=1.25×104K\frac{E_a}{2.303\,R} = 1.25 \times 10^4\,\text{K}
Ea=1.25×104×2.303×8.314J mol1E_a = 1.25 \times 10^4 \times 2.303 \times 8.314\,\text{J mol}^{-1}
=1.25×104×19.147= 1.25 \times 10^4 \times 19.147
=2.393×105J mol1=239.3kJ mol1= 2.393 \times 10^5\,\text{J mol}^{-1} = 239.3\,\text{kJ mol}^{-1}

Part 2: Temperature for t1/2=256mint_{1/2} = 256\,\text{min}:

k=0.693t1/2=0.693256min=0.693256×60s=0.69315360=4.51×105s1k = \frac{0.693}{t_{1/2}} = \frac{0.693}{256\,\text{min}} = \frac{0.693}{256 \times 60\,\text{s}} = \frac{0.693}{15360} = 4.51 \times 10^{-5}\,\text{s}^{-1}

logk=log(4.51×105)=4.346\log k = \log(4.51 \times 10^{-5}) = -4.346

Substituting in the given equation:
4.346=14.341.25×104T-4.346 = 14.34 - \frac{1.25 \times 10^4}{T}
1.25×104T=14.34+4.346=18.686\frac{1.25 \times 10^4}{T} = 14.34 + 4.346 = 18.686
T=1.25×10418.686=669KT = \frac{1.25 \times 10^4}{18.686} = 669\,\text{K}

Answer:
- Ea=239.3kJ mol1E_a = 239.3\,\text{kJ mol}^{-1}
- Temperature for t1/2=256mint_{1/2} = 256\,\text{min} is T669KT \approx 669\,\text{K}
3.28The decomposition of A into product has value of k as 4.5 × 10³ s⁻¹ at 10°C and energy of activation 60 kJ mol⁻¹. At what temperature would k be 1.5 × 10⁴ s⁻¹?Show solution
Given:
- k1=4.5×103s1k_1 = 4.5 \times 10^3\,\text{s}^{-1} at T1=10°C=283KT_1 = 10°\text{C} = 283\,\text{K}
- k2=1.5×104s1k_2 = 1.5 \times 10^4\,\text{s}^{-1}
- Ea=60kJ mol1=60000J mol1E_a = 60\,\text{kJ mol}^{-1} = 60000\,\text{J mol}^{-1}

Using Arrhenius equation:
logk2k1=Ea2.303R(T2T1T1T2)\log\frac{k_2}{k_1} = \frac{E_a}{2.303\,R}\left(\frac{T_2 - T_1}{T_1 T_2}\right)

log1.5×1044.5×103=600002.303×8.314×T2283283T2\log\frac{1.5 \times 10^4}{4.5 \times 10^3} = \frac{60000}{2.303 \times 8.314} \times \frac{T_2 - 283}{283\,T_2}

log103=3132.6×T2283283T2\log\frac{10}{3} = 3132.6 \times \frac{T_2 - 283}{283\,T_2}

0.5229=3132.6×T2283283T20.5229 = 3132.6 \times \frac{T_2 - 283}{283\,T_2}

0.5229×283T2=3132.6(T2283)0.5229 \times 283\,T_2 = 3132.6\,(T_2 - 283)

147.98T2=3132.6T2886,525.8147.98\,T_2 = 3132.6\,T_2 - 886,525.8

886,525.8=(3132.6147.98)T2=2984.62T2886,525.8 = (3132.6 - 147.98)\,T_2 = 2984.62\,T_2

T2=886525.82984.62=296.98K297KT_2 = \frac{886525.8}{2984.62} = 296.98\,\text{K} \approx 297\,\text{K}

Answer: T2297KT_2 \approx 297\,\text{K} (i.e., approximately 24°C24°\text{C})
3.29The time required for 10% completion of a first order reaction at 298K is equal to that required for its 25% completion at 308K. If the value of A is 4 × 10¹⁰ s⁻¹. Calculate k at 318K and Eₐ.Show solution
Step 1: Relate k at 298K and 308K:

For first order: t=2.303klog[A]0[A]t = \dfrac{2.303}{k}\log\dfrac{[A]_0}{[A]}

At 298K, 10% completion (90% remains):
t298=2.303k298log10090=2.303k298×0.04576t_{298} = \frac{2.303}{k_{298}}\log\frac{100}{90} = \frac{2.303}{k_{298}} \times 0.04576

At 308K, 25% completion (75% remains):
t308=2.303k308log10075=2.303k308×0.1249t_{308} = \frac{2.303}{k_{308}}\log\frac{100}{75} = \frac{2.303}{k_{308}} \times 0.1249

Since t298=t308t_{298} = t_{308}:
2.303×0.04576k298=2.303×0.1249k308\frac{2.303 \times 0.04576}{k_{298}} = \frac{2.303 \times 0.1249}{k_{308}}
k308k298=0.12490.04576=2.729\frac{k_{308}}{k_{298}} = \frac{0.1249}{0.04576} = 2.729

Step 2: Calculate Eₐ using Arrhenius equation:
logk308k298=Ea2.303R(T2T1T1T2)\log\frac{k_{308}}{k_{298}} = \frac{E_a}{2.303\,R}\left(\frac{T_2 - T_1}{T_1 T_2}\right)
log(2.729)=Ea2.303×8.314×10298×308\log(2.729) = \frac{E_a}{2.303 \times 8.314} \times \frac{10}{298 \times 308}
0.4361=Ea19.147×10917840.4361 = \frac{E_a}{19.147} \times \frac{10}{91784}
0.4361=Ea1.757×1050.4361 = \frac{E_a}{1.757 \times 10^5}
Ea=0.4361×1.757×105=76,623J mol176.6kJ mol1E_a = 0.4361 \times 1.757 \times 10^5 = 76,623\,\text{J mol}^{-1} \approx 76.6\,\text{kJ mol}^{-1}

Step 3: Calculate k at 318K:
logk318=logAEa2.303RT\log k_{318} = \log A - \frac{E_a}{2.303\,RT}
=log(4×1010)766232.303×8.314×318= \log(4 \times 10^{10}) - \frac{76623}{2.303 \times 8.314 \times 318}
=(10+log4)766236091.5= (10 + \log 4) - \frac{76623}{6091.5}
=10.60212.579=1.977= 10.602 - 12.579 = -1.977
k318=101.977=1.05×102s1k_{318} = 10^{-1.977} = 1.05 \times 10^{-2}\,\text{s}^{-1}

Answer:
- Ea76.6kJ mol1E_a \approx 76.6\,\text{kJ mol}^{-1}
- k318K1.05×102s1k_{318\,\text{K}} \approx 1.05 \times 10^{-2}\,\text{s}^{-1}
3.30The rate of a reaction quadruples when the temperature changes from 293 K to 313 K. Calculate the energy of activation of the reaction assuming that it does not change with temperature.Show solution
Given:
- T1=293KT_1 = 293\,\text{K}, T2=313KT_2 = 313\,\text{K}
- k2=4k1k_2 = 4k_1, so k2k1=4\dfrac{k_2}{k_1} = 4

Using Arrhenius equation:
logk2k1=Ea2.303R(T2T1T1T2)\log\frac{k_2}{k_1} = \frac{E_a}{2.303\,R}\left(\frac{T_2 - T_1}{T_1 T_2}\right)

log4=Ea2.303×8.314×313293293×313\log 4 = \frac{E_a}{2.303 \times 8.314} \times \frac{313 - 293}{293 \times 313}

0.6021=Ea19.147×20917090.6021 = \frac{E_a}{19.147} \times \frac{20}{91709}

0.6021=Ea×2019.147×917090.6021 = \frac{E_a \times 20}{19.147 \times 91709}

0.6021=Ea×201756,0270.6021 = \frac{E_a \times 20}{1756,027}

Ea=0.6021×175602720=1057,45320=52,872J mol1E_a = \frac{0.6021 \times 1756027}{20} = \frac{1057,453}{20} = 52,872\,\text{J mol}^{-1}

Ea52.9kJ mol1E_a \approx 52.9\,\text{kJ mol}^{-1}

Answer: Ea52.9kJ mol1E_a \approx 52.9\,\text{kJ mol}^{-1}

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