How do you calculate the pre-exponential factor from the Arrhenius equation?
1 Answer
By graphing.
The Arrhenius equation is
#\mathbf(k = Ae^(-E_a"/"RT))# ,where:
#k# is the rate constant, in units of#1/("M"^(1 - m - n)cdot s)# , where#m# and#n# are the order of reactant#A# and#B# in the reaction, respectively.#A# is the pre-exponential factor, correlating with the number of properly-oriented collisions.#E_a# is the activation energy in, say,#"J"# .#R# is the universal gas constant,#"8.314472 J/mol"cdot"K"# .#T# is the temperature in#"K"# .
So by taking the natural log, we can solve for
#ln k = lnAe^(-(E_a)/(RT))#
#= lnA - (E_a)/(RT)#
Thus, we have
#color(blue)(stackrel(y)overbrace(ln k) = stackrel(m)overbrace(-(E_a)/(R))stackrel(x)overbrace(1/T) + stackrel(b)overbrace(lnA))#
Therefore, simply graph multiple values of
However,
The less foolproof way that doesn't require multiple data points is to simply divide.
#color(green)(A = k/(e^(-E_a"/"RT)))#
For this you would have to know the activation energy, rate constant, and temperature ahead of time, which you normally don't. Normally