Chemistry, asked by RANJANPRASAD123456, 1 year ago

explain the law of mass action

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

The principle that the rate of a chemical reaction is proportional to the concentrations of the reacting substances. is known as Law Of mass Action.

Explanation :-In chemistry textbooks we often see reactions going. Ever thought how a molecule converts to another and how a simple seeming reaction even carries out?

I would keep it short and to the topic this will give you in depth knowledge of what Law of Mass Action can be.

See, molecules have various motions in the solution. They are constantly undergoing collisions. and this is when a molecule with enough energy collides with another molecules and transforms into another.

compare it with two peoples fighting. If one person hits collides with another there will be no substantial change in their appearance but when they start beating each other with a larger energy they get injured, and get transformed to another being.

Now think yourself, this whole phenomenon of reactions is carried out, the most important part is the collisions. If people would be more, more chances of effective collisions are there.

So law of mass action states that the rate of reaction is directly proportional to the product of activity(or concentration in layman’s terms) of the reactants.

Answered by jatinsoni5808
3
Law of mass action tells us that the rate of chemical rxn is directly proportional to the concentration of the reactants,i.e. aA + bB -------> cC + dD. Hope it helpsyou........ Mark it as a brainlist!
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