- Concentrations of the reactants
- Temperature
- Pressure
- Sirring
- Catalysts
- Granulometry of the reactants
- Reaction order
- Type of the reaction
- The solvent used
- External factors as irradiation
etc.
Nature of reactant,size of reactant,presence of catalyst
this is such a coo thing
The factors that change the reaction rates of chemical reactions are: 1)temperature 2)concentration 3)pressure 4)physical state 5)a catalyst
The proper term for the phenomenon of reaction rates is known as chemical kinetics. Generally for any chemical reaction factors such as temperature, concentration, pressure, physical state, presence of a catalyst, and the reaction rate order. Reaction rate order is specific for each chemical reaction. So to sum it all up, if you influence the environment in a manner that does not change one of these listed variables, then it will not likely do anything to a reaction rate. But to be honest, I can't think of a single thing you could do to a reaction that wouldn't influence one or more of these parameters.
the rate of te forward reaction and the rate of the reverse reaction
The rate of chemical reaction increase as the concentration of the chemicals increase. The reason is obvious. There is more opportunity for the atoms to come in contact with each other. This facilitates rate of chemical reaction.
When reactants and the products that are also contributing to a chemical reaction show no sign over change over time, chemical equilibrium has taken place. Chemical equilibrium can be called a "steady state reaction". It must be noted, however, that just because nothing has changed, it doesn't necessarily indicate that the interaction has stopped.
no answer
The factors that affect in the rate of chemical reaction are temperature and YOU XD HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA jk
paasa >.<
sefhngdjzdey
paasa >.<
The factors that change the reaction rates of chemical reactions are: 1)temperature 2)concentration 3)pressure 4)physical state 5)a catalyst
It is important to control chemical reactions in industry.
nuclear decay rates take more time and chemical reaction rates could happen fast.
There are a number of factors that affect human reaction rates. Temperature is one major factor that affects human reaction rates for example.
warm temperatures; very moist
Surface area is one of them, and I think heat/water.
"Chemical reaction rates vary with the conditions of the change but nuclear rates do not."