Friday, July 19, 2019
Rate of reaction between Hydrochloric Acid and Calcium Carbonate Essay
Rate of reaction between Hydrochloric Acid and Calcium Carbonate        Calcium carbonate reacts with hydrochloric acid to form carbon dioxide  gas. One way of following the rate of reaction at which it reacts is  to measure the volume of carbon dioxide produced at certain time  intervals during the reaction.    CaCO + 2HCl CaCl + H O + CO  ===========================    Calcium Carbonate + Hydrochloric Acid Calcium Chloride + Water  + Carbon Dioxide    Equipment  ---------    Delivery tube  Conical flask  Hydrochloric acid  Calcium carbonate chips  Burette  Beaker  Electric scales  Measuring cylinder  Tub  Water  Electric timer  Goggles    Retort stand    The different factors that can affect my experiment are the  temperature, the concentration of my reactants and the surface area,  also adding a catalyst. We have decided to test different  concentrations of hydrochloric acid for our experiment because it will  give us sufficient results to make our evidence reliable.    RATE OF REACTION BETWEEN    HYDROCHLORIC ACID AND CALCIUM CARBONATE    LOW CONCENTRATION    HIGH CONCENTRATION    I think that during our experiment, the higher the molarity of acid  the quicker the rate of reaction will be, I think this because of the  collision theory. If the solution is made more concentrated, there  will be more particles in the solution. This makes collisions between  important molecules more likely and will collide more often. At the  beginning of the reaction, there are lots of reactants particles (and  no products). This means a lot of productive collisions between  reactants. As time goes on these reactants will become less and less  (because reactants have been turned into products), therefore less  collisions, so the rate of reaction will slow down. If the molarity of  the acid concentratio...              ...act same size we  could use 2 chips in one experiment and get 1g then we could use 4  chips in another experiment and still get 1g. This meant that the  surface area for the hydrochloric acid changed in each experiment for  it to react and collide with. I could have stopped this by sieving so  I would get chips that are of the same or close enough the same  surface area.    Overall my results are fairly reliable, yet could be subjective to  change if better methods were available. If I was to do my experiment  again I would make sure I would do it all on the same day and maybe  change the limits of the products so that the results we got could be  more accurate and we would have less anomalous results like the 2.5  molar experiment. However, if I did this experiment again I would  expect the same results and patterns that I have got apart from the  2.5 molar and 3 molar experiments.                      
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.