
For a hypothetical reaction; , the rate law is
, the order of reaction is


Important Points to Remember in Chapter -1 - Chemical Kinetics from Embibe Experts Achieve CUET (UG) Chemistry Practice Book Solutions
(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 .
(iv) Instantaneous Rate: It is the rate of a reaction at a given instant of time i.e., (average rate) becomes when 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 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 (): 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 (): 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, . Here is collision frequency and is fraction of molecules with energy equal to or greater than activation energy.
3. Rate Law and rate equation:
(i) For the reaction
(ii) Average Rate
(iii) Instantaneous Rate
(iv) Rate Law: For a general reaction, , and are determined experimentally
(v) Order w.r.t. ; Order w.r.t.
Overall Order
(vi) Units of Rate
(vii) Units of k: For reaction of nth order
(viii) Rate law for a zero order reaction
(a) Units of
(b) The integrated rate law equation for a zero order reaction, is
(ix) Half-life Period of a zero order reaction is
(x) Rate law for a first order reaction
(xi) Units of or
(xii) The integrated rate law equation for a first order reaction, is
(xiii) The plot of vs time gives a straight line whose slope
(xiv) Half-life Period of a 1st order reaction,
4. Arrhenius Equation
(i)
(ii)