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Submitted Chris Haslego, Nov 21 2011 11:21 AM | Last updated Mar 19 2013 09:25 AM
Category: | Reactions and Processes |
Question: | After performing the experiment described below, I have the following questions regarding this experiment:1. What thermodynamic sign does activation energy (EA) have? What does this signify?2. The reaction did not start until the contents of the boiling tubes are mixed, is it because sulfuric acid acts as a catalyst in this experiment as it lowers the activation energy between the reactants and the products?3. What is the function of the methyl red in this experiment? |
Keywords: | lab,experiment,questions |
Answer: | The main reaction for this experiment is:5Br- (aq) + BrO3- (aq) + 6H+ --> 3Br2 (aq) + 3H2O (l)One of the tubes contains the Br- and the BrO3- while the other tube contains sulfuric acid, will supply the H+. Thus the sulfuric acid is one of the chief reactants, not a catalyst as you had asked. The definition of a catalyst is a substance that increases the reaction rate of a reactoin without participating in the reaction. This reaction requires no catalyst as it takes place very fast.Once the tubes are mixed, the reaction proceeds to the right. The Br2 produced reacts instantly with the phenol. As soon as the Br2 is produced from the first reaction, it immediately becomes a reactant in the following reaction:3Br2 + phenol --> tribromophenolSince it takes 3 moles of bromine to react with one mole of phenol to produce one mole of tribromophenol, you can measure the reaction rate accurately. When you measure the time you are finding the time to produce 3 moles of bromine. The indicator tell you when 3 moles of the bromine are produced because it changes color when the second reaction is complete. How does it know it is complete? Because there is more bromine produced than there is phenol to react with it. Therefore as soon as the second reaction is completed, the bromine left over reacts with the indicator and changes its color. So, the indicator just tells you, "O.K. 3 moles of bromine have been made"The activation energy is the minimum amount of energy that the reacting molecules must pocess before the reaction will proceed. It is expressed as an amount of heat per amount of reactant (Ex/ kJ/mol). As far as the thermodynamic sign, the convention really isn't agreed upon. Heat is heat and although you can't have negative heat, the sign of the energy variable is used to indicate the direction of the heat's movement. For example, most people use a positive sign to indicate that an entity 'takes in heat'. This is always the case for 'activation energy'. You see, reactants aren't going to have to give off heat before a reaction will proceed, they will need heat. A different type of energy is the heat of reaction. This is different than the activation energy. If a reaction requires additional energy after it has started in order to proceed, it is termed 'endothermic' and the heat of reaction has a positive sign, again because heat must be put into the reaction.. However, many reactions are are 'exothermic' meaning that they give off heat as they proceed, in this instance the heat of reaction has a minus (-) sign because the reaction is giving off heat to the environment. Another thing worth mentioning is that in an industrial seeting, most exothermic reactions must have the heat that they produce carried away from the reactor because (as you saw in your experiment), additional heat will make the reaction proceed faster (in most cases). If this heat isn't taken away and builds up, the reaction can reach a point called "runaway" where the temperature become dangerously high and the reactor may explode. The heat carried away from the reactor is used to produce steam from water (which can be used to make electricity for the plant) or it can be used to heat another stream that needs heat. |
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