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Question: Rate of formation of \(S{O_3}\) ​ in the following reaction \[2S{O_2}\, + {O_2}\, \to \,\,2S{O_3}\]​...

Rate of formation of SO3S{O_3} ​ in the following reaction 2SO2+O22SO32S{O_2}\, + {O_2}\, \to \,\,2S{O_3}​ is 100  kgmin1100\;\,kg\,mi{n^{ - 1}}. Hence rate of disappearance of SO2S{O_2}​ will be:
(A) 100  kgmin1100\;\,kg\,mi{n^{ - 1}}
(B) 80  kgmin180\;\,kg\,mi{n^{ - 1}}
(C) 64kgmin164\,kg\,mi{n^{ - 1}}
(D) 32kgmin132\,kg\,mi{n^{ - 1}}

Explanation

Solution

Rate of formation in chemical kinetics is defined as the change in concentration of the product with respect to time and the rate of disappearance is defined as the change in concentration of the reactant with respect to time. The concentration of the product increases as the reaction proceeds further so it is taken as positive while the concentration of reactant decreases so it is taken as negative.

Complete step by step answer:
For a reaction, 3X+2YZ3X\, + \,2Y \to Z. The rate of the formation of the reaction will be;
rateofformation=ΔZΔtrate\,\,of\,formation = \,\dfrac{{\Delta Z}}{{\Delta t}} and the rate of disappearance will be; rateofdisappearanceofX=ΔXΔtrate\,\,of\,disappearance\,of\,X = \,\dfrac{{\Delta X}}{{\Delta t}}
Given reaction is; 2SO2+O22SO32S{O_2}\, + {O_2}\, \to \,\,2S{O_3}, The rate of formation of SO3S{O_3} is =100  kgmin1 = 100\;\,kg\,mi{n^{ - 1}}
We have to convert the rate of formation into moles/minutemoles/{\text{minute}} So,
Moles =givenweightmolarweight=10080 = \dfrac{{given\,weight\,}}{{molar\,weight}} = \dfrac{{100}}{{80}}
Now, the rate of the reaction will be;
rate  =12[ΔSO2]Δt=[ΔO2]Δt=12[ΔSO3]Δtrate\;\, = \dfrac{1}{2}\dfrac{{[\Delta S{O_2}]}}{{\Delta t}}\, = \dfrac{{[\Delta {O_2}]}}{{\Delta t}}\, = \dfrac{1}{2}\dfrac{{[\Delta S{O_3}]}}{{\Delta t}}
Now we will calculate the rate of disappearance of SO2S{O_2}​. It is given as;
The rate of formation of SO3S{O_3} == the rate of disappearance of SO2S{O_2}
+12[ΔSO3]Δt=12[ΔSO2]Δt+ \dfrac{1}{2}\dfrac{{[\Delta S{O_3}]}}{{\Delta t}}\, = - \dfrac{1}{2}\dfrac{{[\Delta S{O_2}]}}{{\Delta t}}
12weightofSO3molarweightofSO3=12weightofSO2molarweightofSO2\dfrac{1}{2}\dfrac{{weight\,of\,S{O_3}\,}}{{molar\,weight\,of\,S{O_3}\,}}\, = \dfrac{1}{2}\dfrac{{weight\,of\,S{O_2}}}{{molar\,weight\,of\,S{O_2}}}
Let the weight of SO2S{O_2} be xx. Now we will solve the equation for xx.
10080=x64=1.25=x64\dfrac{{100\,}}{{80\,}}\, = \dfrac{{x}}{{64}}\, = 1.25 = \dfrac{x}{{64}}
x=64×1.25=80x = \,64\,\, \times \,1.25 = 80
The value of xx is 80  kgmin180\;\,kg\,mi{n^{ - 1}}. Hence, the rate of disappearance of SO2S{O_2} will be 80  kgmin180\;\,kg\,mi{n^{ - 1}}.

Therefore, Option (B) is correct.
Note:
The rate of reaction is divided into two categories (a) average rate and (b) instantaneous rate. It depends on the amount of time period. If the time taken is finite, then it’s called average rate and if we talk about at a certain point of time it is called instantaneous rate. The rate depends upon temperature because as we increase the temperature the effective collisions between the particles will increase. It also depends on pressure, catalyst, and the stoichiometric coefficients of the reactants and the products.