IB Chemistry R2.2 R2.2.4
R2.2.4 HL

Rate Equations & Arrhenius

The Rate Equation

\( \text{Rate} = k[A]^m[B]^n \)

k = rate constant, m and n = orders (found experimentally, not from stoichiometry)

Order of Reaction

Order Effect on Rate [A] vs Time Graph Rate vs [A] Graph
0 No effect Straight line (linear decrease) Horizontal line
1 Rate ∝ [A] Exponential decay (constant half-life) Straight line through origin
2 Rate ∝ [A]² Curve (steeper initial decrease) Parabola through origin

Finding Orders Experimentally

Use the initial rates method: compare experiments where only one concentration changes.

  • If doubling [A] has no effect on rate → order 0
  • If doubling [A] doubles rate → order 1
  • If doubling [A] quadruples rate → order 2

The Arrhenius Equation

\( k = Ae^{-E_a/RT} \)

A = frequency factor, Ea = activation energy, R = 8.314 J K⁻¹ mol⁻¹

The linear form (for graphing):

\( \ln k = \ln A - \frac{E_a}{R} \cdot \frac{1}{T} \)

Plot ln k vs 1/T → straight line with gradient = −Ea/R

Think About It

The rate equation for: 2NO + O₂ → 2NO₂ is found to be Rate = k[NO]²[O₂]. What is the overall order?

Overall order = 2 + 1 = 3. Note that the orders match the stoichiometric coefficients here, but this is coincidental — orders must always be determined experimentally.

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