How do you solve the Arrhenius equation?
1 Answer
Apr 7, 2016
The Arrhenius equation is:
#\mathbf(k = Ae^(-E_a"/"RT))# where:
#k# is the rate constant, in units that depend on the rate law. For instance, if#r(t) = k[A]^2# , then#k# has units of#"M"/"s" * 1/"M"^2 = 1/("M"cdot"s")# .#A# is the "pre-exponential factor", which is merely an experimentally-determined constant correlating with the frequency of properly oriented collisions.#E_a# is the activation energy in units of, say,#"J"# .#R# is the universal gas constant. Using#"J"# ,#R = "8.314472 J/mol"cdot"K"# .#T# is temperature in#"K"# .
People can determine the temperature themselves when they experimentally figure out the rate constant, so you can assume that you know
I go into how to calculate those here.