The slope of the tangent line at .050M hypochlorite ions is .0032M/S. This rate is much lower than the rate calculated in part d. In general, the more concentrated a solution the higher the reaction rate because the concentration of hypochlorite ions is the same in both reactions this reaction must have a lower concentration of iodine ions than the reaction in part d.
No, "rate hike" is not a compound word. It is a two-word phrase.
overrated
The reaction rate is the rate at which the moles of substance change that varies with both temperature and concentration of the reactants. The specific rate constant is a proportionality constant that will vary only with temperature.
it tells how much the reaction rate is affected by concentration
an enzyme
See details about the Arrhenius reaction at the link below.
For Sn1 reaction the rate usually increases due to steric acceleration. For example the more methyl groups a compound has i.e the more tertiary it is the faster the rate of reaction will be for an Sn1 reaction.
The effect of concentration of reactants on rate of reaction depends on the ORDER of the reaction. For many reactions, as the concentration of reactants increases, the rate of reaction increases. There are exceptions however, for example a zero order reaction where the rate of reaction does not change with a change in the concentration of a reactant.
increasing the concentration increases the rate of the reaction
increasing the concentration increases the rate of the reaction
increasing the concentration increases the rate of the reaction
increasing the concentration increases the rate of the reaction
increasing the concentration increases the rate of the reaction
As the temperature increases, the reaction time decreases.
Grinding the solid into a powder increases the surface area and increases the rate of the reaction. Heating it would also increase the rate.
yes, as the reaction rate increases with increase in the temperature