Chapter 4: Q 37P (page 233)
Draw a reaction-energy diagram for a two-step endothermic reaction with a rate-limiting step.
Short Answer
reaction-energy diagram for a two-step endothermic reaction with a rate-limiting step
Chapter 4: Q 37P (page 233)
Draw a reaction-energy diagram for a two-step endothermic reaction with a rate-limiting step.
reaction-energy diagram for a two-step endothermic reaction with a rate-limiting step
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Get started for freeWhen a small piece of platinum is added to a mixture of ethene and hydrogen, the following reaction occurs:
Doubling the concentration of hydrogen has no effect on the reaction rate. Doubling the concentration of ethene also has no effect.
(a) What is the kinetic order of this reaction with respect to ethene? With respect to hydrogen? What is the overall order?
(b) Write the unusual rate equation for this reaction.
(c)Explain this strange rate equation, and suggest what one might do to accelerate the reaction.
The following reaction is a common synthesis used in the organic chemistry laboratory course.
When we double the concentration of methoxide ion (CH3O-) , we find that the reaction rate doubles. When we triple the concentration of 1-bromopropane , we find the reaction rate triples.
(a) What is the order of this reaction with respect to 1-bromopropane? What is the order with respect to methoxide ion? Write the rate equation for this reaction. What is the overall order?
(b) One lab textbook recommends forming the sodium methoxide in methanol solvent, but before adding 1-bromopropane ,it first distills off enough methanol to reduce the mixture to half of its original volume. What difference in rate will we see when we run the reaction (using the same amounts of reagents) in half the volume of solvent?
When healthy, Earth’s stratosphere contains a low concentration of ozone (O3)that absorbs potentially harmful ultraviolet (UV) radiation by the cycle shown at right.
Chlorofluorocarbon refrigerants, such as Freon 12 (CF2Cl2), are stable in the lower atmosphere, but in the stratosphere, they absorb high-energy UV radiation to generate chlorine radicals.
The presence of a small number of chlorine radicals appears to lower ozone concentrations dramatically. The following reactions are all known to be exothermic (except the one requiring light) and to have high-rate constants. Propose two mechanisms to explain how a small number of chlorine radicals can destroy large numbers of ozone molecules. Which of the two mechanisms is more likely when the concentration of chlorine atoms is very small?
reacts with bromine in the presence of light to give a mono brominate product. Further reaction gives a good yield of a dibrominated product. Predict the structures of these products, and propose a mechanism for the formation of the monobrominated product.
Treatment oftert - butyl alcohol with concentrated HBrgives tert butyl bromide.
When the concentration of H+is doubled, the reaction rate doubles. When the concentration of tert- butyl alcohol is tripled, the reaction rate triples. When the bromide ion concentration is quadrupled, however, the reaction rate is unchanged. Write the rate equation for this reaction.
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