This is because the reactants are being used up to make products. Unless you add more reactants to the solution, the rate at which products will be made will start to diminish until there is an equilibrium. At this point products will be converted to reactants and reactants will be converted to products and the equilibrium will not shift however the forward rxn and the reverse rxn will be occurring at the same rate
d
This is because the reactants are being used up to make products. Unless you add more reactants to the solution, the rate at which products will be made will start to diminish until there is an equilibrium. At this point products will be converted to reactants and reactants will be converted to products and the equilibrium will not shift however the forward rxn and the reverse rxn will be occurring at the same rate
It will increase the rate of the reaction because more particles will be exposed and they will be able to react.This decreases the time to react.
Decrease because particles will move slower causing less collisions.
The forward rate of a chemical reaction will most often decrease with a decrease in temperature. This is because lower temperatures result in lower kinetic energy of molecules, leading to fewer effective collisions and slower reaction rates.
Lowering the temperature to 100°C would decrease the rate of the forward reaction in the Haber process. This is because lower temperatures slow down the kinetic energy of the particles, resulting in fewer collisions between molecules, which in turn reduces the rate of reaction.
Catalysts increase the rate of reaction while Inhibitors decrease it. They both affect the rate of reaction, hence giving us more control over our reaction.
Temperature
For a reversible reaction, the concentration of the products will be more as it approaches the equilibrium. So the rate of reverse reaction will increase and the rate of forward reaction will slow down.
Rate of forward reaction=rate of backward reaction
If interest rate increases will inflution increase or decrease?"
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.