Chemistry, asked by prakash3185, 4 months ago

the instantaneous rate is equal to

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Answered by shanvisharma
0

Answer:

The initial rate of a reaction is the instantaneous rate at the start of the reaction (i.e., when t = 0). The initial rate is equal to the negative of the slope of the curve of reactant concentration versus time at t = 0.

Answered by Anonymous
0

Explanation:

The instantaneous rate of change is the change in the rate at a particular instant, and it is same as the change in the derivative value at a specific point. For a graph, the instantaneous rate of change at a specific point is the same as the tangent line slope. That is, it is a curve slope.

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