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The equation below shows a reaction that produces calcium carbonate. Ca(OH)2(s) CO2(g) CaCO3(s) H2O(l) Which describes a way to speed up the collisions between calcium hydroxide and carbon dioxide molecules to produce calcium carbonate faster

1 Answer

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Answer:

Catalyst

Step-by-step explanation:

There are multiple chemical reactions today that occur at a very slow rate and therefore cannot yield the products for a very long time. While physical properties can be implemented inside an experiment to help speed up a process, a substance called a catalyst can help speed up a reaction to produce more
CaCO_3 molecules.

What is a catalyst?

A catalyst is a substance that lowers the activation energy of a chemical reaction in order to speed up a chemical reaction. A catalyst does not become consumed during the reaction, and therefore does not disrupt the reaction process of the original.

Every reaction must overgo the activation energy, or the minimum amount of energy needed to start a reaction. However, the activation energy can be a steep hill to climb for the reactants, and can have a hard time producing anything. A catalyst is used here to lower the activation energy and assist in the reaction.

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