Collision theory
I can explain why increasing pressure, surface area or concentration increases the frequency of collisions between particles and therefore the rate of reaction.
Collision theory
I can explain why increasing pressure, surface area or concentration increases the frequency of collisions between particles and therefore the rate of reaction.
These resources will be removed by end of Summer Term 2025.
Lesson details
Key learning points
- Particles of reactants in a chemical reaction can react together if they collide with sufficient energy.
- Increasing surface area of a solid lets more reacting particles in a solution collide with its particles each second.
- Increasing concentration of a reacting solution introduces more reactant particles, so they collide more frequently.
- Increasing temperature of reactants increases the speed of particles, so they collide more frequently.
- Increasing pressure of reacting gases pushes reactant particles closer together, so they collide more frequently.
Keywords
Collision theory - The collision theory is that particles must collide, and with sufficient energy, in order to react.
Activation energy - The minimum energy that the particles must have in order to react is known as the activation energy.
Rate of reaction - Rate of reaction is the speed with which a chemical reaction takes place, measured by the amount of a reactant used or amount of product formed in a given time.
Common misconception
That every collision between reactant particles results in a chemical reaction.
The slide deck addresses that not every collision between reactant particles results in a chemical reaction. The particles must collide with the activation energy in order for the collision to be successful and a new product be formed.
Equipment
None required.
Licence
This content is © Oak National Academy Limited (2024), licensed on Open Government Licence version 3.0 except where otherwise stated. See Oak's terms & conditions (Collection 2).
Lesson video
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Starter quiz
6 Questions
particles must collide, and with sufficient energy, in order to react
the minimum energy that the particles must have in order to react
the amount of chemical dissolved in a certain volume of solution
is the total area of every outer surface of an object