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Temperature and rate

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visibility 80update 7 months agobookmarkshare

In this topic you will:

  • investigate the effect of temperature on the rate of reaction
  • carry out a trial run and preliminary work for the investigation and use the information to improve the investigation method
  • select equipment
  • plot a graph of results.
 

Key words

  • precipitate
  •  trial run
  •  preliminary work
 

Changing the temperature of reactants

If you change the temperature of the reactants in a reaction, the rate of reaction will change.

If you mix hydrochloric acid with a solution of sodium thiosulfate (a salt), the mixture becomes cloudy. This is because sulfur is produced. Sulfur is insoluble in water, so it forms a precipitate. The precipitate is opaque – so, when you can no longer see through the solution, you know the sulfur has been formed.

Top: Solution before sulfur forms. Bottom: Cloudy appearance once precipitate is formed.

The reaction is good for investigating reaction rates, because you can easily time how long it takes for the sulfur precipitate to be formed.

And by changing the temperature of the solution, you can investigate the effect of temperature on reaction rates.

 

Key Concept

Precipitate – a solid that forms in a solution during a chemical reaction and makes the solution cloudy or opaque.

 

Think Like a Scientist

The effect of temperature on the rate of reaction

You are going to measure the rate of reaction between sodium thiosulfate and hydrochloric acid at different temperatures.

There are three parts to this: the trial run, the preliminary work and the investigation.

Part 1: The trial run
First you need to carry out a trial run. A trial run means you will carry out a practice experiment to make sure you can do the experiment safely and effectively. You will then be prepared and be ready to overcome any problems you find.

Safety

Make sure the room is well ventilated, because sulfur dioxide gas will be produced. Place any reacted solutions into a container with some solid sodium hydrogencarbonate for your teacher to remove later. The sodium hydrogencarbonate will react with the sulfur dioxide.

You will need:

• safety glasses, test tube with stopper, clamp stand, white card with a cross marked on it, timer or stop clock, sodium thiosulfate solution, dilute hydrochloric acid, large beaker containing solid sodium hydrogencarbonate.

Method

  1. Place 10 cm³ of sodium thiosulfate solution in a test tube.
  2. Fix the test tube into the clamp stand and arrange the card with the black cross behind it as in the diagram.
  3. Add 1 cm³ hydrochloric acid to the test tube and put the stopper in the tube. Start the timer.
  4. Time how long it takes before you can no longer see the cross.
  5. When you have finished, place the contents of the test tube in the large beaker containing sodium hydrogencarbonate.
Apparatus for trial run
 

Questions

1. What information did your trial run give you?
Show Answer

It helped you test your setup, timing process, and recognize any issues in observation or measurement before starting the main experiment.

2. Will you change the way you carry out your investigation as a result of this trial?
Show Answer

You might adjust how you mix the solutions, improve how you observe the cross, or refine the timing method to improve reliability.

Part 2: The preliminary work

The next step is to do some preliminary work to decide which temperatures you will use. To change the temperature of the sodium thiosulfate solution, warm it in a suitable water bath before adding the acid. Make sure there is a stopper in the tube while it is warming.

Discuss in your group how you will do this preliminary work. Here are some of the things you will need to consider:

  • How large a change in temperature is needed to give a reaction time difference we can measure?
  • Will we start the temperatures at room temperature?
  • How big a range of temperatures will we use?
  • Will we increase the temperature by 5°C or 10°C or 20°C?
Planning preliminary temperature changes
 

Questions

3. What equipment will you need for the preliminary work?
Show Answer

You will need safety glasses, a water bath, thermometer, test tubes with stoppers, timer, measuring cylinders, and all standard reaction apparatus.

4. Describe what you have decided to do as your preliminary work.
Show Answer

For the preliminary work, you will test a few different temperatures using the same method as the trial run to decide which range gives measurable results.

5. How will this help you with your final investigation?
Show Answer

It helps you choose appropriate temperature intervals and confirm that the setup produces observable changes.

6. What can you do to try to keep your test tube at the same temperature while the reaction is taking place?
Show Answer

Use insulation or conduct the reaction quickly after heating to minimize heat loss.

7. Write an outline plan for the preliminary work including a results table. Once your outline plan has been checked carry out your preliminary work.
Show Answer

Plan includes testing at 20°C, 30°C, 40°C, 50°C; recording time to cross disappearance; and organizing results in a table with temperature vs. reaction time.

8. What did you find out that will help your final investigation?
Show Answer

You identified a good range of temperatures and refined your technique for better consistency.

Part 3: The investigation

Discuss in your group how you will carry out the final investigation using the information you got from the trial run and the preliminary work.

Questions

9. Write a detailed plan for your investigation. You should include a list of equipment you will need and a results table.
Show Answer

The plan should include steps, equipment list (same as previous stages), and a table with temperature and reaction time columns.

10. How did you make sure your investigation was a fair test?
Show Answer

Kept volumes and concentrations constant, used same timing method, and repeated measurements.

11. Plot a graph of your results.
Show Answer

Plot temperature on the x-axis and reaction time (or rate) on the y-axis to identify trends.

12. Describe the relationship between the temperature and the rate of reaction.
 

Looking at typical results

Here is a graph of some typical results for the rate of reaction between marble chips (calcium carbonate) and hydrochloric acid. This was carried out as in the previous topic.

Graph showing volume of carbon dioxide produced over time at 30°C and 40°C.

You can see from the graph that you do not get any more of the product (carbon dioxide gas) at the higher temperature. You get the same volume of gas but in less time.

 

Common Mistake

Students often think a higher temperature produces more product. The graph shows the final volume of gas is the same — the reaction just happens faster at higher temperatures.

 

Questions

1. How can you tell which line shows the faster reaction?
Show Answer

The line that rises more steeply at the beginning shows the faster reaction, because the gas is produced more quickly in a shorter time.

2. If you did the same experiment at 50°C what would the line on the graph be like?
Show Answer

The line would rise even more steeply than the one at 40°C, but still level off at the same final volume, showing a faster reaction that finishes sooner.

 

Explaining the effect of temperature

Particles move all the time. When the temperature of the reaction is increased, the particles move faster. They collide more often, and with more energy.

Left: Reaction at 30°C – fewer collisions.
Right: Reaction at 40°C – more frequent and energetic collisions.

The higher the temperature, the faster the rate of reaction.

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