Usually, increasing concentration of reactants increases the rate of reaction, but increasing concentrations of products reduces the rate of reaction. However, if one reactant is already present in large stoichiometric excess over another, increasing the concentration of that reactant may not increase the rate of reaction at all, and if the free energy of reaction is large enough in magnitude, increasing the concentration of products may not reduce the rate of reaction at all.
Investigating the Effect of Concentration on the Rate of a Reaction:
The higher the level of concentration equals a higher rate of reaction.
This is mainly due to more substrate available to interact with.
Whitmore Answers!
More the concentration, more the rate of reaction.
Increases reaction rate.
a catalyst can affect the rate of a reaction. speeding it up.
They can all affect the rate of a chemical reaction.
Changing temperatures has a dramatic affect on the rate of chemical reaction. As an example for every 10 degrees you raise the environment the reaction doubles (to a certain degree)
The factors that affect in the rate of chemical reaction are temperature and YOU XD HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA jk
Increases reaction rate.
Increasing the concentration of the reactants increases the rate of the reaction.
Changing temperatures has a dramatic affect on the rate of chemical reaction. As an example for every 10 degrees you raise the environment the reaction doubles (to a certain degree)
a catalyst can affect the rate of a reaction. speeding it up.
That is precisely correct.
They can all affect the rate of a chemical reaction.
it will increase the time of the chemical reaction
Changing temperatures has a dramatic affect on the rate of chemical reaction. As an example for every 10 degrees you raise the environment the reaction doubles (to a certain degree)
The factors that affect in the rate of chemical reaction are temperature and YOU XD HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA jk
The concentration of reactants is changed.
They provide alternative pathway for the reaction, usually with less energy barrier
It doesn't - the reaction rate will not change regardless of how much of that reactant is added. That's the definition of zero-order.