Lab 6-2B: Factors Affecting Reaction Rate
Purpose:
The purpose of this lab was to explore the
different factors that can have an affect on reaction rate. The factors
investigated were temperature, surface area and presence of a catalyst.
Materials:
Part 1
·
Two 400 ml beakers
·
Ice water
·
Hot water
·
Thermometer
·
3 effervescent (carbon)
·
Stopwatch
Part 2
·
3 small test tubes
·
Test tube rack
·
Dish soap
·
6% hydrogen peroxide solution (H2O2)
·
Potassium iodine (KI)
·
Copper(II) chloride (CuCl2)
·
Sodium chloride (NaCl)
Part 3
·
Mortar and pestle
·
Sodium carbonate
·
4 small test tubes
·
Test tube rack
·
Dilute hydrochloric acid solution (HCl)
General Procedure (refer to page 278-279 in the textbook)
- Part 1: Effect of
temperature
- Effect of adding a
catalyst
- Part 3: Effect of surface
area
Results
Part 1:
| Hot water |
| Cold water |
|
Temperature
|
Time for
effervescent tablet to dissolve
|
Extra Observations
|
|
|
4 degrees
Celsius
|
5:55 minutes
(limit)
-it was half
way dissolved but stopped reacting so for it to have fully dissolved would
have taken over 13 minutes
|
-Little froth
-slow
bubbles
-very pale
blue
|
Cold water
|
|
48 degrees Celsius
|
3:15 minutes
|
-immediate
reaction
-lots of
froth
-lots of
bubbles
-brighter
blue liquid
|
Hot water
|
|
26 degrees Celsius
|
Prediction: 10
minutes
Actual time:
10-11 minutes (stopped at 5 min and it was halfway dissolved)
|
-froth
-bubbles
-pale blue
liquid
|
Combined water
|
Part 2
|
Temperature
|
Observations
|
|
|
4 degrees
Celsius
|
-Turned an
orange yellow colour fast
-Lots of
froth (almost overflowed)
-Took a
second then froth “dramatically” increased in height
|
Potassium Iodide
|
|
48 degrees Celsius
|
-turned blue
fairly fast
-some froth
and bubbles
|
Sodium Chloride
|
|
26 degrees Celsius
|
-Stayed clear/slightly pink
-no froth
|
Copper Chloride
|
Part 3
| (crushed sodium carbonate on left, solid on right side) |
·
Crushed sodium carbonate reacted faster (when placed
into hydrochloric acid)
·
Solid sodium carbonate reacted slower (when
placed into hydrochloric acid)
Analyze
- The rate of reaction between
changes in temperature is as follows: the higher the temperature the
faster the reaction rate, the slower the temperature the slower the
reaction rate. This effect can be explained through kinetic molecular
theory in which when heat is added particles start to move faster, more
energy is created and particles are more likely to bump into each other
with harder collisions.
- My partner, Celina and I
predicted for the tablet to dissolve in roughly 10 minutes in combined
temperature water. We took the average of the time it took for the tablet
to dissolve both in hot and cold water and adding on an extra 2 minutes (reasoning
that 8 minutes seemed too quick). Our prediction was proved correct
because after 5 minutes of observation the tablet was ½ dissolved. Using basic arithmetic we can concluded
that the tablet would completely dissolve in roughly another 5 minutes
(give or take).
- (a) The two solutions that
could have acted as catalysts were Potassium Iodide and Sodium Chloride.
Both they solutions showed an almost immediate reaction when added into
the soap and 6 percent hydrogen peroxide solution; they changed the colour
of the solution and started to froth and create bubbles.
(b) Potassium Iodide sped up the reaction the most
making me conclude that it was the best overall catalyst. With only a small piece of solid the solution
immediately started to froth, change colour and almost overflowed from the
beaker.
4.
A 5g of sodium carbonate powder has more surface
area than 5g lump of sodium. Although they both have the same mass the powder exposes surface area on each little
“piece” that composes the mass while the lump only exposes the surface area
of the top of each particle while hiding inside the surface area of the other
particles that compose it
5.
The more surface area exposed the more surface
area is exposed to molecules therefore more collision can happen meaning more
possibilities and therefore a higher reaction rate. In part 3 of this lab (step 14) the rate of
the sodium carbonate decomposition was greater with the powder than the solid
because the powder had more surface area exposed. The more surface area is exposed to molecules
the more collision can happen meaning more possibilities/surface area for them
to bump into one another and therefore a higher reaction rate.
Conclude and Apply
1.
Three methods I would suggest to decrease the
reaction rate would be to
a.
Use a solid version of the powder: less surface
area exposed meaning a smaller chance for particles to collide therefore the
reaction rate decreases
b.
Dilute the concentration of the acid
c.
Cool down the acid: lower temperature means that
particles move slower and therefore have a smaller chance with colliding with
one another and therefore the reaction rate decreases.
d.
Add a catalyst like Potassium iodide: it will lower
the energy of a reaction therefore speeding it up and will line up the
molecules so that they can collide easier.
Conclusion
From this experiment I learned that some ways to increase
reaction rate would be to add a catalyst, increase temperature and create more
surface area. I also learned that amongst Potassium Iodide, Copper chloride and
Sodium chloride, Potassium iodide and Copper chloride were catalysts and that Potassium
iodide speedup the reaction rate the most.