Consider the following hypothetical reaction:
Calculate the average
a. Pure
b. Pure
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- For each of the following pairs of reaction diagrams, identify which of the pair is catalyzed:arrow_forwardThe reaction for the Haber process, the industrial production of ammonia, is N2(g)+3H2(g)2NH3(g) Assume that under certain laboratory conditions ammonia is produced at the rate of 6.29 ×10-5 molL-1s-1. At what rate is nitrogen consumed? At what rate is hydrogen consumed?arrow_forwardConsider the hypothetical reaction A+B+2C2D+3E In a study of this reaction three experiments were run at the same temperature. The rate is defined as [B]/t. Experiment 1: [A]0 = 2.0 M [B]0 = 1.0 103 M [C]0 = 1.0 M [B] (mol/L) Time(s) 2.7 104 1.0 105 1.6 104 2.0 105 1.1 104 3.0 105 8.5 105 4.0 105 6.9 105 5.0 105 5.8 105 6.0 105 Experiment 2: [A]0 = 1.0 102M [B]0 = 3.0 M [C]0 = 1.0 M [A] (mol/L) Time(s) 8.9 103 1.0 7.1 103 3.0 5.5 103 5.0 3.8 103 8.0 2.9 103 10.0 2.0 103 13.0 Experiment 3: [A]0 = 10.0 M [B]0 = 5.0 M [C]0 = 5.0 101M [C] (mol/L) Time(s) 0.43 1.0 102 0.36 2.0 102 0.29 3.0 102 0.22 4.0 102 0.15 5.0 102 0.08 6.0 102 Write the rate law for this reaction, and calculate the value of the rate constant.arrow_forward
- Substances that poison a catalyst pose a major concern for many engineering designs, including those for catalytic converters. One design option is to add materials that react with potential poisons before they reach the catalyst. Among the commonly encountered catalyst poisons are silicon and phosphorus, which typically form phosphate or silicate ions in the oxidizing environment of an engine. Group 2 elements are added to the catalyst to react with these contaminants before they reach the working portion of the catalytic converter. If estimates show that a catalytic converter will be exposed to 625 g of silicon during its lifetime, what mass of beryllium would need to be included in the design?arrow_forwardTable 11-2 illustrates how the average rate of a reaction decreases with time. Why does the average rate decrease with time? How does the instantaneous rate of a reaction depend on time? Why are initial rates used by convention?arrow_forwardExperiments were conducted to study the rate of the reaction represented by this equation.[2] 2NO(g)+2H2(g)N2(g)+2H2O(g) Initial concentrations and rates of reaction are given here. Experiment Initial Concentration [NO] (mol/L) Initial Concentration, [H2] (mol/L) Initial Rate of Formation of N2 (mol/L min) 1 0.0060 0.0010 1.8104 2 0.0060 0.0020 3.6104 3 0.0010 0.0060 0.30104 4 0.0020 0.0060 1.2104 Consider the following questions: (a) Determine the order for each of the reactants, NO and H2, from the data given and show your reasoning. (b) Write the overall rate law for the reaction. (c) Calculate the value of the rate constant, k, for the reaction. Include units. (d) For experiment 2, calculate the concentration of NO remaining when exactly one-half of the original amount of H2 had been consumed. (e) The following sequence of elementary steps is a proposed mechanism for the reaction. Step 1: NO+NON2O2 Step 2: N2O2+H2H2O+N2O Step 3: N2O+H2N2+H2O Based on the data presented, which of these is the rate determining step? Show that the mechanism is consistent with the observed rate law for the reaction and the overall stoichiometry of the reaction.arrow_forward
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