CHEM 134 Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Calcium Hydroxide, Magnesium Oxide, Reaction Rate

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If reactants are uniformly dispersed in a single homogeneous solution, the number of collisions per unit time depends on concentration and temperature. The rate of a heterogeneous reaction depends on the surface area of the more condensed phase. This is a very broad category that encompasses the different reacting properties of substances. For example sodium reacts with water explosively at room temperature to liberate hydrogen and form sodium hydroxide. Calcium reacts with water only slowly at room temperature to liberate hydrogen and form calcium hydroxide. The reaction of magnesium with water at room temperature is so slow that that the evolution of hydrogen is not perceptible to the human eye. However, mg reacts with steam rapidly to liberate h2 and form magnesium oxide. The differences in the rate of these three reactions can be attributed to the changing nature of the reactants . The increase in the molecule numbers is indicative of an increase in concentration.

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