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Ipatiy [6.2K]
3 years ago
10

A chemistry graduate student is studying the rate of this reaction:

Chemistry
1 answer:
mel-nik [20]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

Rate = k[NH₄OH]²

k = 6.17

Explanation:

We have concentrations of NH₄OH along with the given times. To determine the rate law of the reaction we need to determine first the order of reaction. This reaction can be order zero, first or second order. The expressions for each are the following:

Zero order:

k = [A₀] - [A] / t

First order:

k = 1/t * ln([A₀]/[A])

Second order:

k = (1/t) * (1/[A₀] - 1/[A])

And from here, the next part is easier. We just need to determine hat order is, calculating the value of k at two different times. If the value of k is constant, then we can say that the reaction is of that order.

Let's suppose its order zero (t = 1 and t = 2, [A₀] = 0.200 M):

k1 = 0.2 - 0.0895 / 1 = 0.1105

k2 = 0.2 - 0.577 / 2 = -0.1885

From this results we can conclude it's not zero order.

Let's suppose its order 1:

k1 = ln(0.2/0.0895) / 1 = 0.8041

k2 = ln(0.2/0.577) / 2 = 0.1733

It's not first order either, so we can conclude that this reaction is of 2nd order and the rate law would be:

<h2>Rate = k[NH₄OH]² </h2>

Now that we know it's a second order reaction, we can determine the value of k using its expression:

k = (1/t) (1/[A] - 1/[A₀])

k = ln(1/0.0895 - 1/0.2) (1/1)

k = 6.17

And to confirm this value, let's calculate k for t = 2 s

k = (1/2) (1/0.0577 - 1/0.2)

<h2>k = 6.17</h2>

The value is constant, so this is the true value of k.

Hope this helps

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A mover packs books, CDs, and DVDs into a moving box. If the box contains 6.5 kg of books, 1.5 kg of CDs, and 2.0 kg of DVDs, wh
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Given: 
<span>M1 = 6.5 kg of books
</span><span>M2 = 1.5 kg of CDs
</span><span>M3 = 2.0 kg of DVDs

Required: percent by mass of each object

Solution:
First, we calculate the total mass.

M = 6.5 kg + 1.5 kg + 2.0 kg =  10 kg

Percent by mass is calculated by getting the ration of the mass of an object and the total mass multiplied by 100 to get the percent.

%M1 = 6.5 / 10 x 100 = 65%
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Is apple juice a homogeneous mixture or a heterogeneous mixture
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If you mean the industrialized apple juice then yes. Even though there are several different compounds and some of them aren't actually dissolved in the liquid, since you can't actually distinguish between them using only your eyes and they do no separate naturally it is actually a homogeneous mixture.


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In an experiment to study the photoelectric effect, a scientist measures the kinetic energy of ejected electrons as afunction of
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Answer:

a) v₀ = 4.41 × 10¹⁴ s⁻¹

b) W₀ = 176 KJ/mol of ejected electrons

c) From the graph, light of frequency less than v₀ will not cause electrons to break free from the surface of the metal. Electron kinetic energy remains at zero as long as the frequency of incident light is less than v₀.

d) When frequency of the light exceeds v₀, there is an increase of electron kinetic energy from zero steadily upwards with a constant slope. This is because, once light frequency exceeds, v₀, its energy too exceeds the work function of the metal and the electrons instantaneously gain the energy of incident light and convert this energy to kinetic energy by breaking free and going into motion. The energy keeps increasing as the energy and frequency of incident light increases and electrons gain more speed.

e) The slope of the line segment gives the Planck's constant. Explanation is in the section below.

Explanation:

The plot for this question which is attached to this solution has Electron kinetic energy on the y-axis and frequency of incident light on the x-axis.

a) Wavelength, λ = 680 nm = 680 × 10⁻⁹ m

Speed of light = 3 × 10⁸ m/s

The frequency of the light, v₀ = ?

Frequency = speed of light/wavelength

v₀ = (3 × 10⁸)/(680 × 10⁻⁹) = 4.41 × 10¹⁴ s⁻¹

b) Work function, W₀ = energy of the light photons with the wavelength of v₀ = E = hv₀

h = Planck's constant = 6.63 × 10⁻³⁴ J.s

E = 6.63 × 10⁻³⁴ × 4.41 × 10¹⁴ = 2.92 × 10⁻¹⁹J

E in J/mol of ejected electrons

Ecalculated × Avogadros constant

= 2.92 × 10⁻¹⁹ × 6.023 × 10²³

= 1.76 × 10⁵ J/mol of ejected electrons = 176 KJ/mol of ejected electrons

c) Light of frequency less than v₀ does not possess enough energy to cause electrons to break free from the metal surface. The energy of light with frequency less than v₀ is less than the work function of the metal (which is the minimum amount of energy of light required to excite electrons on metal surface enough to break free).

As evident from the graph, electron kinetic energy remains at zero as long as the frequency of incident light is less than v₀.

d) When frequency of the light exceeds v₀, there is an increase of electron kinetic energy from zero steadily upwards with a constant slope. This is because, once light frequency exceeds, v₀, its energy too exceeds the work function of the metal and the electrons instantaneously gain the energy of incident light and convert this energy to kinetic energy by breaking free and going into motion. The energy keeps increasing as the energy and frequency of incident light increases and electrons gain more speed.

e) The slope of the line segment gives the Planck's constant. From the mathematical relationship, E = hv₀,

And the slope of the line segment is Energy of ejected electrons/frequency of incident light, E/v₀, which adequately matches the Planck's constant, h = 6.63 × 10⁻³⁴ J.s

Hope this Helps!!!

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This is seen in the first law of Thermodynamics stating that matter and energy cannot be destroyed nor created.
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