Chemistry, asked by ravinakhade10, 6 months ago

2. As the temperature increases, the rate of reaction increases. Explain why?
Ans.​

Answers

Answered by XArsh73xd
10

Increasing the temperature increases reaction rates because of the disproportionately large increase in the number of high energy collisions. It is only these collisions (possessing at least the activation energy for the reaction) which result in a reaction.

Answered by hyacinth98
1

Expanding temperature builds the pace of response for 2 reasons: the first (minor) reason is that particles have more motor energy with expanding temperature

Rate of reaction

  • Expanding temperature builds the pace of response for 2 reasons: the first (minor) reason is that particles have more kinetic energy with expanding temperature, so there are more impacts between reactant particles the subsequent explanation is that at a higher temperature, more particles have more energy, in this way a greater amount of the particles have energy more prominent than (or equivalent to) the collision energy, so more crashes will bring about a response for each unit time.
  • The expanded temperature increments the response rate since it builds how many viable impacts between reactants.
  • With the expansion in the temperature, the number of atoms with energy is equivalent to or more prominent than enactment energy increments. This builds the number of compelling crashes and the pace of the response.

(#SPJ6)

Similar questions