Understanding Rates of Reaction (A-Level Chemistry)
Chemical reactions can happen very quickly—like the explosion of hydrogen and oxygen—or very slowly, such as the rusting of iron. The rate of reaction simply describes how fast reactants are converted into products.
Understanding reaction rates is important in chemistry because it allows scientists and engineers to control processes in industry, medicine, environmental science, and even everyday cooking.
What Do We Mean by the Rate of Reaction?
In chemistry, the rate of reaction is the change in concentration of a reactant or product per unit time.
In simple terms:
For example, if a reactant disappears quickly, the reaction rate is high. If it disappears slowly, the reaction rate is low.
Students often measure reaction rates in the laboratory by observing:
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The volume of gas produced
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The loss of mass as gas escapes
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A colour change
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The formation of a precipitate
The Collision Theory
The key idea behind reaction rates is collision theory.
For a reaction to occur:
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Particles must collide with each other
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The collision must have enough energy (activation energy)
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The particles must collide in the correct orientation
Only collisions that meet these conditions are called successful collisions.
This explains why many collisions between molecules do not actually lead to a reaction.
Factors That Affect Reaction Rates
Several important factors control how quickly reactions happen.
1. Temperature
Increasing temperature gives particles more kinetic energy.
They move faster and collide more frequently and with greater energy.
Result: Reaction rate increases significantly.
2. Concentration (or Pressure for Gases)
Higher concentration means more particles in the same volume.
This leads to more frequent collisions, increasing the reaction rate.
3. Surface Area
Solid reactants react faster when they are broken into smaller pieces.
For example:
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Powdered calcium carbonate reacts faster with acid than large marble chips.
Why? Because a larger surface area is exposed to the reactant.
4. Catalysts
A catalyst speeds up a reaction without being used up.
Catalysts work by providing an alternative reaction pathway with lower activation energy.
This means more collisions are energetic enough to lead to a reaction.
Catalysts are extremely important in industry—for example in the Haber process for producing ammonia.
Measuring Reaction Rates in the Laboratory
One of the classic school experiments involves reacting calcium carbonate with hydrochloric acid.
Students can measure the rate by:
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Collecting carbon dioxide gas in a gas syringe
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Measuring mass loss as the gas escapes
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Timing how long it takes for the reaction to finish
Using modern sensors—such as PASCO gas sensors or pressure sensors—students can capture the reaction data digitally and plot rate curves in real time.
This kind of experiment fits perfectly with a modern data-logging chemistry lab, where students can actually see how the rate changes during the reaction.
Why Rates of Reaction Matter
Understanding reaction rates allows chemists to:
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Make industrial reactions faster and more efficient
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Prevent dangerous explosions
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Improve drug production
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Understand environmental processes
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Design better catalysts
In many industrial processes, speed and efficiency can save enormous amounts of energy and cost.
Final Thought
Rates of reaction show that chemistry is not just about what reacts, but how quickly it happens. By controlling temperature, concentration, surface area, and catalysts, chemists can influence the speed of reactions and make chemical processes work to our advantage.
For students studying A-Level chemistry, reaction rates are a perfect example of where theory meets practical experimentation—and where good data collection can reveal the hidden dynamics of chemical change.





