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What is the rate law?

The rate law is an equation that expresses how the rate of a chemical reaction depends on the concentrations of reactants.

Key points:

  1. General form: For a reaction aA + bB → products, the rate law is:
    • Rate = k [A]^m [B]^n
    • k = rate constant (depends on temperature)
    • m, n = reaction orders with respect to A and B (determined experimentally)
  2. Reaction order:
    • m and n tell how sensitively the rate depends on each reactant’s concentration.
    • Overall order = m + n
  3. Significance:
    • Shows the relationship between concentration and reaction rate.
    • Helps determine the mechanism of the reaction.
  4. Important notes:
    • The exponents (m, n) are not necessarily equal to stoichiometric coefficients.
    • k changes with temperature but not with concentration.

In short: The rate law tells us how fast a reaction occurs and how the reactant concentrations affect that speed.

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