Rate of Reaction Calculator
Calculation Results:
Change in Quantity:
Rate of Reaction:
Understanding How to Calculate Rate of Reaction
In chemistry, the rate of reaction measures how quickly reactants are converted into products. Whether you are observing a bubbling flask or a color change, calculating the speed of that process is fundamental for laboratory work and industrial chemistry.
The Basic Rate Formula
The rate of a chemical reaction is defined as the change in the amount of a reactant or product divided by the time taken for that change to occur. The formula is expressed as:
Common Units Used
Depending on what you are measuring, the units for the rate of reaction will change:
- Concentration: If measuring molarity, the unit is mol/dm³/s.
- Mass: If measuring a solid reactant disappearing, the unit is g/s.
- Volume: If measuring gas production, the unit is cm³/s or ml/s.
Step-by-Step Example
Imagine you are reacting Magnesium with Hydrochloric Acid. You measure the volume of Hydrogen gas produced.
- Initial Volume: 0 cm³ (at 0 seconds)
- Final Volume: 50 cm³ (after 20 seconds)
- Calculate Change: 50 – 0 = 50 cm³
- Apply Formula: 50 cm³ / 20 s = 2.5 cm³/s
Factors Affecting the Rate
Several factors can increase or decrease the frequency of successful collisions between particles:
- Temperature: Increasing temperature gives particles more kinetic energy.
- Concentration/Pressure: More particles in a fixed space increases collision frequency.
- Surface Area: Breaking solids into powder provides more area for collisions.
- Catalysts: These lower the activation energy required for the reaction to proceed.