Chemical Reaction Rate Calculator
Use this tool to calculate the average reaction rate between two points on a concentration-time graph. Enter the values observed at the two points (Point 1 and Point 2) on your graph.
Point 1 (Start)
Point 2 (End)
Calculated Reaction Rate
Units: mol / (L · s)
How to Calculate the Reaction Rate in Graph 1
In chemical kinetics, the reaction rate measures how fast a reactant is consumed or a product is formed. When analyzing a Concentration vs. Time graph (often referred to as Graph 1 in chemistry problems), the reaction rate is fundamentally the slope of the line.
The Mathematical Formula
The average rate of reaction over a specific time interval is calculated using the following formula:
Rate = |(C₂ – C₁) / (t₂ – t₁)|
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Identify Point 1: Look at your graph and find the concentration (y-axis) at the initial time (x-axis).
- Identify Point 2: Find the concentration at the final time of the interval you are measuring.
- Determine the Difference: Subtract the initial values from the final values.
- Divide: Divide the change in concentration by the change in time.
- Note on Signs: Reaction rates are traditionally expressed as positive values. For reactants, the slope is negative because concentration decreases, but we take the absolute value.
Practical Example
Suppose Graph 1 shows a reactant with an initial concentration of 2.0 mol/L at 0 seconds. After 20 seconds, the concentration drops to 0.8 mol/L.
- ΔConcentration = 0.8 – 2.0 = -1.2 mol/L
- ΔTime = 20 – 0 = 20 s
- Rate = |-1.2 / 20| = 0.06 mol/(L·s)
This means that on average, 0.06 moles of the substance are disappearing from every liter of the solution every second.