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
Using the following aqueous dissolution reactions, draw the corresponding reaction progress diagram (energy vs reaction progress)...
3. Energy Diagrams: Using the axes below, draw an energy diagram for an endothermic reaction. Label the following in your diagram: The reactants "The products "The activation energy "The total energy gained or lost by the reaction (AH) reaction progress
Enzymes are important molecules in biochemistry that catalyze reactions. The energy diagram illustrates the difference between a catalyzed reaction and an uncatalyzed reaction. Label the energy diagram. Answer Bank AG for reaction activation energy catalyzed reaction reactants (substrate) free energy uncatalyzed reaction reaction progress products transition state What ways do enzymatic catalysts increase the rates of reactions? They shift the reaction equilibrium toward the products. They lower the activation energy of the reaction They decrease the free energy of the...
Draw an energy diagram for each of the reactions described below. Properly label each diagram, including reactants, products, transition state, axis labels, scale (set the reactants at 0 kJ/mol), Delta H, and E_a. Exothermic by 43 kJ/mol; E_a = 95 kJ/mol Endothermic by 15 kJ/mol; E_a = 55 kJ/mol Which of the reactions will occur the fastest? Slowest? Assume equal temperatures, concentrations, and the same rate law for both reactions.) For which of the reactions would the reverse reaction be...
Which of the following half reactions is MOST LIKELY TO OCCUR at the cathode of an electrolytic cell containing aqueous NaCl? You may use the table of reduction potentials. Group of answer choices a) Cl2(g) + 2 e− → 2 Cl−(aq) b) Na+(aq) + e− → Na(s) c) Cl−(aq) + e− → Cl2−(aq) d) 2 H2O(l) + 2 e− → H2(g) + 2 OH−(aq) e) Na(s) + e− → Na−(aq) Can you explain which reaction I should look for (s,...
**WRITTEN WORK** Draw a detailed free energy diagram for the following Snl reaction. Include and label the overall reactants, the overall products, the intermediate(s), the axis, and the transition state(s). Br C1 Syl HTML Editore n = = X Х D
The activation energy for this reaction is 76 kJ/mol. Draw an energy diagram for this reaction, showing the relative energies of the reactants, the activated complex, and the products. Using arrows show the activation energy and heat of reaction.
c. b. A+B e. a Free Energy d. Progress of the Reaction Given the energy diagram for the reaction of A+B --> C above, what is represented by the arrow marked d.? Select one: O A. Activation energy of the reverse catalyzed reaction o B. Energy difference between the catalyzed and uncatalyzed reactions OC. Activation energy of the reverse uncatalyzed reaction o D. Energy difference between the reactants and products
2. Draw an energy diagram for the first reaction in problem #1. Label the axis, reactants, products, any intermediates (if needed) and transition states. Than indicate using dotted a line how the diagram would change if CH,CH2OH was used as the solvent instead of acetone. 3. Draw the mechanism showing how the following molecule can best be produced using a SN2 reaction (the molecule shown below is the product, you need to determine the proper reactants (RX and Nu)).
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...
8. A). Draw a Free energy diagram for each of the following reactions below. In your diagram indicate the Free energy of activation (AG°*) and the overall free energy change (AG®rxn) B). Determine which side of the equilibrium is favored (products or reactants). C). Calculate the relative equilibrium constant for each the reaction. (Hint: use pkas) NH2 ONH NaOH H20 + pka 27 NH3 NH2 + HO + NaOH pka = 4.6