Rate Equations (AQA A-Level Chemistry): Revision Notes
📚 Revision Notes
5.2.1 Rate Equations
Understanding the Rate Equation
The rate of a chemical reaction depends on the concentrations of the reactants and is described by a rate equation. For a reaction with reactants and , the rate equation takes the form:
where:
- is the rate constant, which links the rate of reaction to the reactant concentrations.
- and are the concentrations of reactants and .
- and are the orders of reaction concerning and , indicating the power to which each concentration is raised. The overall order of reaction is the sum of and , and it can affect the shape of the rate–concentration graph and the units of the rate constant .
Key Terms in Rate Equations
Order of Reaction:
- The order with respect to each reactant shows how the rate of reaction depends on the concentration of that reactant.
- For A-Level exams, orders are limited to 0, 1, or 2.
- 0 Order: The rate is independent of the concentration of that reactant.
- 1st Order: The rate is directly proportional to the concentration of the reactant.
- 2nd Order: The rate is proportional to the square of the concentration of the reactant.
Rate Constant ():
- A proportionality constant that links the reaction rate to the concentrations of reactants in the rate equation.
- Units of k depend on the overall order of reaction:
- 0 Order:
- 1st Order:
- 2nd Order:
- The value of is specific to each reaction at a given temperature and increases with temperature.