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kherson [118]
2 years ago
11

The rate of disappearance of HBr in the gas phase reaction 2 HBr(g) → H2(g) + Br2(g) is 0.140 M s-1 at 150°C. The rate of appear

ance of Br2 is ________ M s-1. The rate of disappearance of HBr in the gas phase reaction 2 HBr(g) → H2(g) + Br2(g) is 0.140 M s-1 at 150°C. The rate of appearance of Br2 is ________ M s-1.
a. 0.0700
b. 1.28
c. 0.0196
d. 0.280
e. 0.374
Chemistry
1 answer:
djverab [1.8K]2 years ago
6 0

Answer: The rate of appearance of Br_2 is 0.0700Ms^{-1}

Explanation:

Rate law says that rate of a reaction is directly proportional to the concentration of the reactants each raised to a stoichiometric coefficient determined experimentally called as order.

2HBr(g)\rightarrow H_2(g)+Br(g)

The rate in terms of reactants is given as negative as the concentration of reactants is decreasing with time whereas the rate in terms of products is given as positive as the concentration of products is increasing with time.

Rate in terms of disappearance of HBr = -\frac{1d[HBr]}{2dt}Rate in terms of appearance of [tex]H_2 = \frac{1d[H_2]}{dt}

Rate in terms of appearance of Br_2 = \frac{1d[Br_2]}{dt}

-\frac{1d[HBr]}{2dt}=\frac{d[H_2]}{dt}=\frac{d[Br_2]}{dt}

Given :

-\frac{1d[HBr]}{dt}=0.140Ms^{-1}

The rate of appearance of Br_2;

\frac{1d[Br_2]}{dt}=-\frac{1d[HBr]}{2dt}=\frac{1}{2}\times 0.140=0.0700Ms^{-1}

Thus rate of appearance of Br_2 is 0.0700Ms^{-1}

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Using your data above, draw conclusions about the d-splitting for each ligand (H2O, en, phen). Order the complexes from least to
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