Wednesday, October 2, 2019
How concentration affects the rate of reaction between Hydrochloric Aci
How concentration affects the rate of reaction between Hydrochloric Acid and Sodium Thiosulphate    Chemistry Coursework    How Concentration Affects a Reaction    Aim:    The aim of this experiment is to find out how concentration affects  the rate of reaction between Hydrochloric Acid and Sodium  Thiosulphate.    Introduction:    This experiment will be carried out by drawing a cross on a piece of  paper and mixing hydrochloric acid and sodium thiosulphate together to  see if the cross disappears. The concentration of hydrochloric acid  would change every reaction to show that concentration effects a  reaction. The time in which the cross took to disappear would be  recorded as well as the temperature at the start and end of the  reaction, the concentration of the hydrochloric acid and the amount of  hydrochloric acid and sodium thiosulphate used.    Sodium Thiosulphate + Hydrochloric Acid ------------> Sodium Chloride  + Water + Sulphur Dioxide + Sulphur    Na2S2O3 + 2HCl 2NaCl + H2O + SO2 + S    Preliminary Work:    The problems that arose whilst doing the preliminary experiment was  that the beakers and measuring cylinders were not cleaned out properly  and some of the sodium thiosulphate turned cloudy were there was  previously hydrochloric acid inside the beaker.    The preliminary experiment showed that concentration effects the rate  of reaction as well as the temperature does. The higher the  concentration of hydrochloric acid, the faster the reaction was  because the more particles there were to collide and break old bonds  and make new bonds. Also if the temperature was higher the particles  would move around faster because they have more energy and would also  cause more effective collisions.                              GRAPH    Fair Test:    The experiment will ...              ... anomalies within the experiment and this may have been caused by  the stirring or the timer being started and stopped wrongly. I think  that our group had a good method because our results showed what we  were trying to find out, which was to test how the change of  concentration affects a reaction. To get rid of any anomalies we could  have either not stir the mixture or use a machine to stir it at the  same speed each time. I think that the procedure that we had used was  adequate to test and that it was reasonably reliable. In my prediction  I had stated that as the concentration increases, the time taken for a  10% decrease in light intensity would decrease. This is because more  particles would be in the higher concentration causing more effective  collisions to happen. In future experiments we could increase the  range of results as well as having more intermediate values.                      
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