Friday, July 19, 2019
The Rate of Reaction Of Metals with Acids :: GCSE Chemistry Coursework Investigation
The Rate of Reaction Of Metals with Acids      Introduction    In this investigation I will be looking at the rate of reaction  between a metal, which will be magnesium ribbon, and an acid. The  acids will either be hydrochloric, ethanoic, sulphuric or phosphoric  acid. I will be finding out if the activation energy changes depending  on whether a strong or weak acid is used. I will also be investigating  whether or not there is a change in the order of reaction if a dibasic  acid is used instead of a monobasic acid.    Planning    This investigation is therefore split up into separate experiments.  Experiment 1 is to find the activation energy for the reactions  between hydrochloric acid and magnesium ribbon, then ethanoic acid and  magnesium ribbon. The only way to find the activation energy is to  time how long it takes for the reaction to complete at different  temperatures. Experiment 2 is to find the order of reaction between  magnesium ribbon and hydrochloric acid, then sulphuric acid. There are  several methods that can be used to find the order of reaction:    à · I could use an excess of magnesium ribbon and note down how much gas    has evolved every 10 seconds until the reaction has finished.    à · I could repeat the same procedure as above, but with an excess of    acid instead of magnesium ribbon.    à · I could use an excess of acid and change the concentration, this    would not require the reaction to be completed so I would have to time    how long it takes for a set amount of hydrogen gas to form.    There are several chemical equations that are relevant to this  investigation:-    Mg(s) + 2HCl(aq)  MgCl2(aq) + H2(g)    Mg(s) + H2SO4(aq)  MgSO4 + H2(g)    Mg(s) + 2CH3CO2H(aq)  Mg(CH3CO2)2(aq) + H2(g)    3Mg(s) + 2H3PO4(aq)  Mg3(PO4)2(aq) + 3H2(g)    In my experiments I will not be using phosphoric acid due to time  restrictions and it is not relevant to the problems I am discussing,  because it is a tribasic acid and I am comparing monobasic and dibasic  acids.    The equation needed to find the activation energy in a reaction is  called the Arrhenius equation.    In k = constant ââ¬â EA/R (1/T)    Where k = rate constant    EA = activation energy (J molà ¹)    R = gas constant, 8.31 J Kà ¹ molà ¹    T = temperature in Kelvin    Initial Problems    - The time restriction makes it extremely hard to find the order of    reaction by timing how long it takes for all the magnesium to    disappear.    - I do not want to directly heat acid as this is dangerous when only    					    
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