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What are reaction order and molecularity?

Here’s a explanation of reaction order and molecularity:


1. Reaction Order

  • Reaction order tells us how the rate of a reaction depends on the concentration of reactants.
  • It is determined experimentally, not from the chemical equation.
  • Each reactant has its own order, and the sum of these is the overall order of the reaction.
  • For example, if a reaction is first-order in a reactant, doubling its concentration doubles the reaction rate; if it is second-order, doubling the concentration quadruples the rate.

Key point: Reaction order can be 0, 1, 2, fraction, or even negative, depending on how the reactant affects the rate.


2. Molecularity

  • Molecularity refers to the number of reactant molecules that collide simultaneously to cause a reaction.
  • It is a theoretical concept, based on the reaction mechanism.
  • It can be:
    • Unimolecular: one molecule reacts by itself.
    • Bimolecular: two molecules collide and react.
    • Termolecular: three molecules collide and react (rare).

Key difference:

  • Reaction order is experimental and can be any number.
  • Molecularity is theoretical and always a whole number (1, 2, or 3).

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