IB Chemistry R2.2 Notes

This page contains our IB Chemistry notes for R2.2. By reading each one of these notes, you will fully cover the content for IB Chemistry 'Further rate of change'.
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The Rate expression and Rate constant

Now that you know basics of rates and the factors that impact it, in the HL syllabus you need to be able to quantify rate and perform calculations.

Let's start by looking at the rate expression, which is used to determine the rate of a reaction at a specific temperature based on the concentration of the reactants. For a two reactant system, the formula is:

Rate=k[A]x[B]yRate = k[A]^{x}[B]^{y}

Note that this is different to a rate equation, which can only be determined with experimental data.

In this:

  1. [A] is the concentration of reactant A. 
  2. [B] is the concentration of reactant B.
  3. k is the rate constant.
  4. x is the order of reactant A.
  5. y is the order of reactant B.

Whilst [A] and [B] are obvious, the rest are new, so let's cover them.

The rate constant reflects the rate at a certain temperature, and thus changes as temperature changes. The units used for k depend on the reaction order, so let's cover this.

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