Can the order and molecularity of a reaction be the same?
Can the order and molecularity of a reaction be the same?
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1 Answer
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Yes, in elementary reactions, order and molecularity can be the same, but this is not always the case because order is an experimental quantity, and molecularity is a theoretical concept.
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Kindly go through the solution
Ea = 216.164kJ/mol 216
Reaction rate is used to measure how fast or slow reactions occur per unit time. The rate constant is a proportionality factor that remains constant for every reaction.
Reaction Kinetics, also known as chemical kinetics, is the study of the rate of chemical reaction and the factors affecting the reaction rate, such as temperature, concentration, and catalyst.
A → 2B
t = 0: 1 mole 0
after 100 min: (1 - 0.1) mol 0.2 mol
K = (1/t)ln [a/ (a-n)]
K = (2.303/100)log (1/0.9) min? ¹
0.693/t? /? = (2.303/100) [log10 - log9] = (2.303/100) x 0.046
t? /? = 69.3 / (2.303 x 0.046) = 654.15 min
Ans. = 654 (the nearest integer)
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