4. The percentage (%) increase in the rate of a chemical reaction will be maximum when the temperature is increased from: a. 270 K to 280 K b. 280 K to 290 K c. 290 K to 300 K d. In all these cases the increase will be the same

4. The percentage (%) increase in the rate of a chemical reaction will be maximum when
the temperature is increased from:
a. 270 K to 280 K
b. 280 K to 290 K
c. 290 K to 300 K
d. In all these cases the increase will be the same

Question Analysis

Reaction rates follow the Arrhenius equation k = A e^(-Ea/RT), where higher temperatures exponentially increase the rate constant k by boosting molecular collisions with sufficient activation energy Ea.

Percentage increase: (k₂ - k₁)/k₁ × 100% = (e^(Ea/R × (1/T₁ - 1/T₂)) - 1) × 100%

The percentage increase depends on Δ(1/T), which decreases as absolute temperature rises despite fixed 10 K intervals.

Option Breakdown

Option Temperature Range Δ(1/T) % Increase (Ea ≈ 50 kJ/mol) Explanation
a 270 K to 280 K 0.000132 ~122% Largest Δ(1/T) yields maximum exponential increase
b 280 K to 290 K 0.000123 ~110% Less than option a
c 290 K to 300 K 0.000115 ~100% (doubling) Smallest Δ(1/T)
d Same increase Incorrect: Δ(1/T) varies

Correct Answer: a. 270 K to 280 K

Why Lower Temperatures Maximize Increase

At lower Kelvin ranges like 270K-280K, the relative change in 1/T is largest for equal ΔT=10K intervals, amplifying k’s exponential growth. Calculations confirm ~122% rise here versus ~100% at 290K-300K for Ea = 50 kJ/mol. Rates roughly double every 10°C rise near room temperature, but percentage gains diminish higher up.

CSIR NET Exam Insights

This MCQ tests Arrhenius understanding: option a wins as 1/270 – 1/280 > 1/290 – 1/300. Practice with ln(k₂/k₁) = Ea/R × (1/T₁ - 1/T₂) to solve similar problems.

 

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