Instantaneous Rate of Reaction Calculator
What is the Instantaneous Rate of Reaction?
In chemical kinetics, the instantaneous rate of reaction is the speed at which a chemical reaction proceeds at a specific moment in time. Unlike the average rate, which measures change over a long interval, the instantaneous rate is equivalent to the derivative of the concentration with respect to time (d[C]/dt) at a single point on a concentration-vs-time graph.
The Rate Law Formula
The calculation performed by this tool is based on the differential Rate Law. For a reaction involving reactants A and B, the formula is:
Rate = k [A]m [B]n
- k: The rate constant, which is specific to each reaction at a given temperature.
- [A], [B]: The molar concentrations of the reactants at that specific instant.
- m, n: The reaction orders with respect to each reactant (usually determined experimentally).
How to Use This Calculator
To find the rate at a specific moment, follow these steps:
- Enter the Rate Constant (k). Ensure the units are consistent with your concentrations.
- Input the Concentration of your primary reactant ([A]).
- Input the Order of that reactant (e.g., 0 for zero-order, 1 for first-order, 2 for second-order).
- If the reaction involves a second reactant, enter its concentration and order. If not, you can leave these blank (the calculator will treat the order as 0).
- Click Calculate Rate to see the result in Moles per liter per second (M/s).
Practical Example
Suppose you have a second-order reaction where k = 0.02 M⁻¹s⁻¹ and the concentration of reactant A is 0.5 M. To find the instantaneous rate:
- Rate = k [A]²
- Rate = 0.02 × (0.5)²
- Rate = 0.02 × 0.25
- Rate = 0.005 M/s
Why is it Important?
Calculating the instantaneous rate is crucial for chemical engineers and chemists to monitor how fast reactants are being consumed at the very start of a reaction (initial rate) or at any critical point during a process. It helps in determining the mechanism of the reaction and predicting how changing concentrations will affect productivity in industrial chemical synthesis.