Sunday, January 19, 2020
Rate of Reaction Coursework :: GCSE Chemistry Coursework Investigation
An experiment to find the rate of reaction between two liquids    Introduction    This is an experiment to determine the effect of changing the  concentration of sodium thiosluphate (Na S O (aq)) on the rate of  reaction between sodium thiosulphate and hydrochloric acid (HCL (aq)).    HCl+sodium thiosulphatearrowsodium chloride+sulphur  dioxide+sulphur+water.  HCl(aq) + Na2S2O3(aq) arrow NaCl(aq) + SO2(g) + S(s) + H2O(l)    If one were to place hydrochloric acid and sodium thiosulphate into a  beaker a white cloudy solution is left in the beaker. The rate of the  reaction can be controlled by concentrating one of the liquids, or one  could add water to dilute the mixture to slow the reaction.    Method Apparatus  Two beakers of 50cm3  Sodium Thiosulphate  Hydrochloric acid  Conical flask  Measuring tube-10cm3  Measuring tube-50cm3    The apparatus is set up as shown above. I will place 50cm3 of Sodium  Thiosulphate; I will keep Hydrochloric acid at a constant rate of  5cm3. Then I will reduce the sodium thiosulphate and increase the  water, for example:    50cm3: 0cm3  40cm3: 10cm3  30cm3: 20cm3  20cm3: 30cm3  10cm3: 40cm3    When the reaction is complete the solution left should be white and  cloudy, to test this; I will place a piece of paper with a cross on  it. If I cannot see the cross on the paper then the reaction has  finished.    Constants    * Hydrochloric acid  * Temperature  * Length of X on paper  * Room temperature    Variables    Ã · Sodium thiosulphate    Ã · Water    Hydrochloric acid will be kept at a constant rate because the  experiment is about changing the concentration of sodium thiosulphate.  The temperature will be kept constant with a precise thermometer in  the solution. The paper with the X on it will always be the same piece  of paper. The room temperature will be kept constant because I will  make sure the windows are closed.    Sodium thiosulphate will be varied because that is the point of the  experiment. The water will be varied to dilute the reaction.    Scientific explanation    In order for the sodium thiosulphate and Hydrochloric acid to react  their particles must:    * Collide with each other  * The collision must have enough energy    This is shown by the explanation below:    The particles in the liquid If the collision has enough If the  collision move around continually. energy, a reaction takes place does  not have here an acid particle is enough energy  about to collide with a   no reaction sodium atom  occurs. The acid particle bounces away again.    If there are a lot of collisions then the rate of the reaction is  fast. If there are not many, the rate is low.    The rate of a reaction depends on how many successful collisions there  are in a given unit of time.    There are three main ways of speeding up a reaction:    * Changing the concentration    					    
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