Thursday, January 23, 2020
The Rate Law for Chemical Reaction Among Hydrogen Peroxide, Iodide, and
The Rate Law for Chemical Reaction Among Hydrogen Peroxide, Iodide, and Acid    To determine the rate law for a chemical reaction among hydrogen peroxide,   iodide and acid, specifically by observing how changing each of the   concentrations    Experiment 3 Chemical Kinetics    Objectives    1. To determine the rate law for a chemical reaction among  hydrogen peroxide, iodide and acid, specifically by observing how  changing each of the concentrations of H2O2, and H+ affects the rate  of reaction.    2. To observe the effects of temperature and catalyst on the rate  of reaction.    Introduction    Generally, two important questions may be asked about a chemical  reaction:    (1)How far do the reactants interact to yield products, and (2) how  fast is the reaction? ââ¬Å"How far?â⬠ is a question of chemical equilibrium  which is the realm of chemical thermodynamics. ââ¬Å"How fast?â⬠ is the  realm of chemical kinetics, the subject of this experiment.    In this experiment we will study the rate of oxidation of iodide ion  by hydrogen peroxide which proceeds according to the following  reaction:    H2O2 (aq) + 2 I-(aq) + 2H+(aq) I2(aq) + 2H2O(l)    By varying the concentrations of each of the three reactants (H2O2, I-  and H+), we will be able to determine the order of the reaction with  respect to each reactant and the rate law of the reaction, which is of  the form:    Rate = k [H2O2]x[I-]y[H+]z    By knowing the reaction times (â⬠ t) and the concentrations of H2O2 of  two separate reaction mixtures (mixtures A & B), the reaction order of  H2O2, x, can be calculated.    x = log(â⬠ t2/ â⬠ t1) / log ( [H2O2]1/[H2O2]2 )    The same method is used to obtain the reaction order with respect to I-  (mixtures A & C) and H+ (mixtures A & D).    Procedures    Part I) Standardization of H2O2 Solution    1. A stand, a burette clamp and a white tile were collected to  construct a titration set-up.    2. A burette was rinsed with deionized water and then with 0.05 M  Na2S2O3 solution.    3. The stopcock of the burette was closed and the sodium  thiosulphate solution was pour into it until the liquid level was near  the zero mark. The stopcock of the burette was opened to allow the  titrant to fill up the tip and then the liquid level was adjusted near  zero.    4. The initial burette reading was recorded in Table 1.    5. 1.00 cm3 of the ~0.8 M H2O2 solution was pipetted into a clean  125 ...              ...te of a reaction by  providing an alternative pathway for the reaction, usually with a  pathway of lower activation energy than that of the uncatalyzed  reaction.    There are some improvements in this experiment.    First, hydrogen peroxide is unstable, it decomposes to water and  oxygen by time. Therefore do the titration as quick as possible.    2H2O2(aq)  2H2O(I) + O2(g)    Second, the concentration of iodine increase is due to the iodide can  be oxidized by oxygen which promoted by acids. Therefore do the  titration as quick as possible.    4I-(aq) + O2(g) + 4H+(aq)  2I2(aq) + 2H2O(aq)    Third, as for the human error, the problem can be minimized by  performing the titration by the same person. So, the reading can be  taken by the same person and the color change can be observed by the  same person.    Conclusion    In the experiment, the reaction was found to be zero order respect to  (H+), it is first order respect to iodide, (I-) , it is first order  respect to hydrogen peroxide, (H2O2). Hence the rate law is Rate = k[H2O2][I-].  The rate of reaction is increase when the temperature is increase and  the rate is increase when a positive catalyst is added to the  reaction.                        
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