IB Chemistry R2.2 R2.2.2
R2.2.2

Factors Affecting Rate

There are five main factors that affect the rate of reaction. Each works by changing either the frequency or energy of collisions.

1. Temperature

Higher T → particles move faster → more frequent collisions AND more particles with E ≥ Ea.

~10°C rise ≈ doubles rate

2. Concentration

Higher concentration → more particles per volume → more frequent collisions.

For gases: higher pressure = same effect

3. Surface Area

Smaller pieces → more surface exposed → more collisions with reactant particles.

Only for heterogeneous reactions

4. Catalyst

Provides an alternative pathway with lower Ea. More particles can exceed the lower Ea.

Unchanged at end of reaction

Effect of a Catalyst on Activation Energy

Reaction Progress Enthalpy Reactants Products Uncatalysed Catalysed Ea Ea (cat)

The catalyst lowers the activation energy but does not change ΔH.

Think About It

If a catalyst lowers Ea, how does the Maxwell-Boltzmann diagram change?

The distribution itself does NOT change — the particles still have the same energies. But the Ea line moves to the left, so a larger proportion of particles now has sufficient energy to react.

← R2.2.1 Collision TheoryR2.2.3 Measuring Rate →