Tuesday
May 21, 2013

Homework Help: chemistry

Posted by Deidra on Thursday, December 6, 2012 at 12:18pm.

The standard free energy of activation of a reaction A is 78.2 kJ mol–1 (18.7 kcal mol–1) at 298 K. Reaction B is ten million times faster than reaction A at the same temperature. The products of each reaction are 10.0 kJ mol–1 (2.39 kcal mol–1) more stable than the reactants.

Answer this Question

First Name:
School Subject:
Answer:

Related Questions

Chemistry - The standard free energy of activation of a reaction A is 88.6 kJ ...
Chemistry - The standard free energy of activation of one reaction is 94.3 kj/...
chemistry - The activation energy for the reaction in which CO2 decomposes to CO...
Chemistry - A reaction has a standard free-energy change of –12.40 kJ mol&#...
Chemistry - A reaction has a standard free-energy change of -11.80 kJ/mol (-2....
chemistry - I have two questions that I really don't understand. The first ...
AP Chem - The energy change H associated with the reaction NBr3(g) + 3H2O(g...
CHEMISTRY> HELP QUICK! pls - Calculate the reaction free energy of: H2(g...
Chemistry - The standard molar Gibbs free energy of formation of NO2 (g) at 298 ...
Chemistry - Calculate the entropy change in the surroundings when 1.00 mol N2O4(...

For Further Reading

Search
Members
Community