4. Please draw and label the following four types of reactions (all are single-step reactions): corresponding...
3. Answer the following questions based on the reaction coordinate diagram below: Reaction pathway a. How many transition states are present? Label on the diagram. b. How many intermediates are present? Label on the diagram. c. Is the reaction endergonic or exergonic? d. What is the rate-limiting step for this reaction? 5. The decomposition of SO2CI2 into SO2 and Cl2 is first order in [SO2CI2) a. What is the rate if [SO2Cl2)- 0.2M C, the rate constant is 2.2 x...
4. Draw a free energy reaction coordinate diagram for both a generic endergonic and a generic exergonic reaction (label each). Make sure to label the x- and y-axes. Now label where reactants and products should go on the figure. Draw something that illustrates the free energy change for each reaction. Now write something like the following next to your figures: “reactants <—> products”. a. What do the reaction coordinate diagrams have to do with the text you just wrote? b. What...
3. Look at Figure 16.22 (p.727), the reaction energy diagrams for the two step reactions of a) NO, and F, and b) NO and O2 Write down the mechanisms for both reactions, and these mechanisms based on the corresponding reaction energy diagrams. IMG_0338.jpg v Q Search Depicting a Multistep Mechanism with a Reaction Energy Diagram Figu re 16.22 shows reaction energy diagrams for two reactions, each of which has a two-step mechanism, shown below the diagram. The reaction of NO,...
3. Answer the following questions based on the reaction coordinate diagram below: Reaction pathway a. How many transition states are present? Label on the diagram. b. How many intermediates are present? Label on the diagram. c. Is the reaction endergonic or exergonic? d. What is the rate-limiting step for this reaction?
2. Given the reaction coordinate diagram below, answer the following questions: Free energy Progress of the reaction a) How many intermediates are formed in the reaction? b) Which letter(s) represent(s) a transition state? c) What is the fastest step in the reaction? d) Which is more stable: A or G? e) Does A or E form faster from C? f) Which is the most stable intermediate? g) What is the reactant of the rate-determining step? h) is the first step...
action coordinate diagram, for the reaction 0. All parts of this question relate to the following reaction coordinate diagram A+B+C ....... D+ E Energy B+C+X D+E A+B+C (a) Write a mechanism for the forward reaction, showing all elementary steps. (b) What intermediates (ie, not reactants or products) are present in this mechanism? (c) Which is the rate determining step for the reaction? (d) Mark the activation energy for the rate-determining step on the diagram above. (e) What is the rate...
please snswer all thanks 5. For the following reaction step, indicate which pattern of arrow pushing it represents. Circle one. A. proton transfer C. nucleophilic attack B. loss of leaving group D. rearrangement 6. The following reaction has three mechanistic steps (down, across, and up), Draw all of the curved arrows necessary to complete the mechanism. (Hint: there should be 4 arrows total) HBO OH Br H-Br OH2 + Hö 7. Draw the most likely structure of the following cation...
Using the following aqueous dissolution reactions, draw the corresponding reaction progress diagram (energy vs reaction progress) and label products and reactants: a.) NaCl (s) +H2O→Na+(aq) +Cl- (aq) +H2O b.) KCl (s) +H2O→K+(aq) +Cl- (aq)+H2O c.) CaCl2 (s) +H2O→Ca+(aq)+ 2Cl- (aq) +H2O
3. Indicate the nucleophilic group and the electrophilic group in each of the following reactions, then draw curved arrows to show the electron flow: (a) H- N H -CH: (D) - (C) NH :CI: CI-APë: :CA: 1-ci: A-CI: 4. The following reaction has a small, positive AG and takes place slowly at room temperature: H3C-CI H-OH - H3C-OH - H-CI (a) The mechanism for the reaction is shown below. Which bond is being broken in the slowest step? Which bond...
6. All parts of this question relate to the following reaction coordinate diagram, for the reaction A + B + C -- --> D+E Free Energy B+C+X D+E A+B+C (a) Write a mechanism for the forward reaction, showing all elementary steps. (b) What intermediates (ie, not reactants or products) are present in this mechanism? (a) Write a mechanism for the forward reaction, showing all elementary steps. (b) What intermediates (i.e, not reactants or products) are present in this mechanism? (e)...