Question 12.3: Initial rate data for the decomposition of gaseous N2O5 at 5......

Initial rate data for the decomposition of gaseous  N_{2}O_{5}  at 55°C are as follows:

(a) What is the rate law?

(b) What is the value of the rate constant?

STRATEGY

(a) The rate law for the decomposition of can be written as

Rate  = – \frac{\Delta [N_{2}O_{5}]}{\Delta t} = k [N_{2}O_{5}]^{m}

here m is both the order of the reaction in  N_{2}O_{5}  and the overall reaction order. To find the value of the exponent m, compare the change in the initial concentration of  N_{2}O_{5}  for experiments 1 and 2 with the change in the initial rate.

(b) To find the value of the rate constant k, solve the rate law for k and then substitute in the data from either experiment.

Experiment Initial  [N_{2}O_{5}] Initial Rate of Decomposition of  N_{2}O_{5}  (M / s)
1 0.020 3.4 \times 10^{-5}
2 0.050 8.5 \times 10^{-5}
Step-by-Step
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(a) Comparing experiments 1 and 2 shows that an increase in the initial concentration of  N_{2}O_{5}  by a factor of 2.5 increases the initial rate by a factor of 2.5:

\frac{[N_{2}O_{5}]_{2}}{[N_{2}O_{5}]_{1}} = \frac{0.050  M}{0.020  M} = 2.5 \quad\quad \frac{(\text{Rate})_{2}}{(\text{Rate})_{1}} = \frac{8.5 \times 10^{-5}  M/s}{3.4 \times 10^{-5}  M/s} = 2.5

The rate depends linearly on the concentration of  N_{2}O_{5}  , and therefore the rate law is

\text{Rate} = – \frac{\Delta [N_{2}O_{5}]}{\Delta t} = k [N_{2}O_{5}]

The reaction is first order in  N_{2}O_{5}  . If the rate had increased by a factor of (2.5)² = 6.25 , the reaction would have been second order in  N_{2}O_{5}  . If the rate had increased by a factor of (2.5)³ = 15.6 , the reaction would have been third order in  N_{2}O_{5}  and so on.

A more formal way to approach this problem is to write the rate law for each experiment:

(\text{Rate})_{1} = k[N_{2}O_{5}]_{1} = k(0.020  M)^{m}\quad\quad (\text{Rate})_{2} = k[N_{2}O_{5}]_{2} = k(0.050  M)^{m}

If we then divide the second equation by the first, we obtain

\frac{(\text{Rate})_{2}}{(\text{Rate})_{1}} = \frac{k (0.050  M)^{m}}{k(0.020  M)^{m}} = (2.5)^{m}

Comparing this ratio to the ratio of the experimental rates,

\frac{(\text{Rate})_{2}}{(\text{Rate})_{1}} = \frac{8.5 \times 10^{-5}  M/s}{3.4 \times 10^{-5}  M/s} = 2.5

shows that the exponent m must have a value of 1. Therefore, the rate law is

\text{Rate} = – \frac{\Delta [N_{2}O_{5}]}{\Delta t} = k [N_{2}O_{5}]

(b) Solving the rate law for k and substituting in the data from the first experiment gives

k = \frac{\text{Rate}}{[N_{2}O_{5}]} = \frac{3.4 \times 10^{-5}  \frac{M}{s}}{0.020  M} = 1.7 \times 10^{-3}  s^{-1}

The units of k, 1/s or  s^{-1}  are given by the ratio of the units for the rate and the con-centration. These are the expected units for a first-order reaction.

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