Q.17 For a particular reaction, the use of a catalyst reduces the activation energy (Ea) to one-third its original value. The ratio of rate constants (kcatalyzed / kuncatalyzed) is: 1 1/3 exp (2Ea / 3RT) exp (Ea / 3RT)

Q.17

For a particular reaction, the use of a catalyst reduces the activation energy
(Ea) to one-third its original value. The ratio of rate constants
(kcatalyzed / kuncatalyzed) is:

  1. 1
  2. 1/3
  3. exp (2Ea / 3RT)
  4. exp (Ea / 3RT)

Catalyst Reduces Activation Energy to One-Third – Rate Constant Ratio Using Arrhenius Equation

Understanding how a catalyst reduces activation energy and increases the reaction rate
is an important concept in Chemical Kinetics. Using the Arrhenius equation, we can
calculate the ratio of rate constants for catalyzed and uncatalyzed reactions easily.


Step 1: Arrhenius Equation

The Arrhenius equation is:

k = A exp( −Ea / RT )

  • k = rate constant
  • A = frequency factor
  • Ea = activation energy
  • R = gas constant
  • T = temperature

Step 2: Write Rate Constants

Uncatalyzed Reaction

ku = A exp( −Ea / RT )

Catalyzed Reaction

Given:
E’a = Ea / 3

kc = A exp( −Ea / 3RT )


Step 3: Take Ratio

kc / ku
=
[A exp( −Ea / 3RT )] /
[A exp( −Ea / RT )]

Cancel A:

= exp( −Ea/3RT + Ea/RT )


Step 4: Simplify

= exp( (3Ea − Ea) / 3RT )

= exp( 2Ea / 3RT )


Final Answer

kcatalyzed / kuncatalyzed = exp( 2Ea / 3RT )

Correct Option: (C)


Explanation of Each Option

(A) 1

If ratio = 1, catalyst has no effect. Catalysts always increase rate. ❌ Incorrect

(B) 1/3

Rate constant does not change linearly with activation energy. It follows exponential relation. ❌ Incorrect

(C) exp(2Ea/3RT)

Correctly derived using Arrhenius equation. Shows exponential increase in rate. ✅ Correct

(D) exp(Ea/3RT)

Mathematical simplification is wrong. ❌ Incorrect


Concept Summary

  • Catalyst lowers activation energy
  • More molecules cross energy barrier
  • Rate increases exponentially
  • Small change in Ea → large change in rate

Quick Comparison Table

Case Activation Energy Rate Constant
Uncatalyzed Ea Lower
Catalyzed Ea/3 Much Higher

 

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