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30 May, 20:58

If the concentration of h2 is doubled, will the reaction rate quadruple, double, or remain the same?

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  1. 30 May, 23:25
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    The answer depends on the rate law.

    1) If the rate law is first order on H2, then:

    r = K [H2] / A

    Since K is a constant and you are not varying A, then the rate will double if [H2] doubles.

    2) If the rate law is second order on H2, then:

    r = [H2]^2 / A

    Again, since K is a constant and you are no varying A, then the rate will quadruple if [H2] is doubled because:

    (2 * [H2]) ^2 = 4 [H2]^2

    3) If the rate law is of zero order on H2, then the rate will remain the same, because the rate does not depend of the concentration of H2.
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