Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
We call this type of problem, "determining a rate law by the method of initial rates."
We want to know how much a change in the concentration of a reactant will change the rate of a reaction.
We must measure the reaction rate once. Then we repeat the experiment. We change the concentration of one reactant and leave everything else the same.
The equation for this reaction is
2ClO₂ + 2OH⁻ ⟶ ClO₃⁻ + ClO₂⁻ + H₂O
The general form of the rate law is
Our task is to find the values of m and n.
Data:
1. Calculate m
Consider experiments 1 and 2 .
In going from Experiment 2 to Experiment 1, we tripled the concentration and the rate tripled.
If tripling the concentration triples the rate, the reaction is 1st order.
m = 1, so the rate law becomes
2. Calculate n
Consider experiments 2 and 3 .
In going from Experiment 3 to Experiment 3, we tripled the concentration and the rate tripled.
n = 1, so the rate law becomes
3. Write the overall order
Overall order = m + n = 1 + 1 = 2
The overall reaction order is 2.
4. Calculate k
From Experiment 1,