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According to Maxwell Boltzmann distribution of energy, _____.

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Important Points to Remember in Chapter -1 - Chemical Kinetics from NCERT NCERT Exemplar Chemistry - Class 12 Solutions

1. Rate Law and rate equation:

(i) Chemical Kinetics is the branch of chemistry which deals with the study of reaction rates and their mechanism.

(ii) Rate of Reaction: It is the rate of change of concentration of any of the reactant or product with time at any particular moment of time.

(iii) Average Rate: The rate of reaction measured over a long time interval is called average rate. It is given as ΔxΔt.

(iv) Instantaneous Rate: It is the rate of a reaction at a given instant of time i.e., ΔxΔt (average rate) becomes dxdt when Δt approaches zero.

(v) Rate Expression: The mathematical expression giving the rate of a reaction in terms of concentration of reactants at a given temperature.

(vi) Rate Constant (k): It is the rate of the reaction when the concentration of each of reacting species is unity.

(vii) Rate Law: Describes the reaction rate in terms of concentrations of reactants.

(viii) Molecularity: The number of reacting species which collide simultaneously to bring about the chemical change.

(ix) Order of Reaction: The sum of the exponents of the concentration terms in the experimental rate law of reaction. It can be 0, 1, 2, 3 or a fractional value.

(x) Integrated Rate Equation: The differential rate equations which are integrated to give a relationship between rate constant and concentrations at different times.

(xi) Rate Determining Step is the slowest step in the reaction mechanism.

(xii) Half-life Period of Reaction (t1/2): The time taken for the concentration of reactants to be reduced to half of their initial concentration.

2. Activation energy and collision theory:

(i) Activation Energy (Ea): The additional energy required by reacting species over and above their average PE to enable them to cross the energy barrier between reactants and products.

(ii) Catalyst: A substance which enhances the rate of a reaction without itself undergoing chemical change.

(iii) Effective Collisions: The collisions responsible for changing the reactant molecules into product molecules.

(iv) Threshold Energy: The minimum energy that a reacting species must possess in order to undergo effective collisions.

(v) Collision Theory: A chemical reaction takes place due to collisions between reacting molecules. For a bimolecular reaction, Rate=ZAB.e-Ea/RT. Here Z is collision frequency and e-Ea/RT is fraction of molecules with energy equal to or greater than activation energy.

3. Rate Law and rate equation:

(i) For the reaction aA+bBcC+dD

(ii) Average Rate =-1aΔAΔt=-1bΔBΔt=1cΔCΔt=1dΔDΔt

(iii) Instantaneous Rate =-1adAdt=-1bdBdt=1cdCdt=1ddDdt

(iv) Rate Law: For a general reaction, aA+bBproducts, Rate=kAmBn m and n are determined experimentally

(v) Order w.r.t. A=m; Order w.r.t. B=n

Overall Order =m+n

(vi) Units of Rate =mol L-1s-1    or    Atm s-1

(vii) Units of k: For reaction of nth order k=mol L-11-ns-1 or  atm1-ns-1

(viii) Rate law for a zero order reaction =dxdt=kA0

(a) Units of k=mol L-1s-1

(b) The integrated rate law equation for a zero order reaction, RP is      k=R0-Rt

(ix) Half-life Period t1/2 of a zero order reaction is t1/2=R02k

(x) Rate law for a first order reaction =dxdt=kA1

(xi) Units of k=s-1 or min-1

(xii) The integrated rate law equation for a first order reaction, AB is k=2.303tlogA0A

(xiii) The plot of log [A] vs time gives a straight line whose slope=-k2.303

(xiv) Half-life Period of a 1st order reaction, t1/2=0.693k

4. Arrhenius Equation

(i) k=Ae-Ea/RT

(ii) logk2k1=Ea2.303 RT2-T1T1T2