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Calculating Rate Of Reaction Given The Rate Equation, Concentration An


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#1 paul2752

paul2752

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Posted 30 June 2016 - 03:34 AM

I am working on a question about rate of reaction;

 

this is how it goes. 

 

You are given concentrations of A at specific time, and you have to find the rate of reaction at each time.

 

The rate of reaction equation is: dc/dt=-0.0773c^n, where c means concentration and t means time in minutes. 

 

I am stuck in how I should find the "n". Simply integrating the given equation keeps giving me n=1, which I don't think is right....

 

Also, when I made a scatter plot of concentration vs time, the graph looked pretty much linear so I am even more confused because that would mean the reaction is zeroth order. Attached File  scatter plot.JPG   40.63KB   0 downloads

 

How should I approach to this?


Edited by paul2752, 30 June 2016 - 03:38 AM.


#2 breizh

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Posted 30 June 2016 - 05:46 AM

Paul ,

I may be rusty , seems to me that the result of the integration is : C^(1-n) -C(t=0) ^(1-n) =( n-1) *-0.0773 *(t)

t=0 , C(t=0) =0.85

 

Hope this helps

 

Breizh



#3 paul2752

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Posted 30 June 2016 - 12:45 PM

I did that, but then it keeps giving me n=1, which i don't think is right as I said earlier






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