Working out order from rate tables
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- Опубліковано 16 гру 2024
- Oh such a popular question with examiners! This video looks at how you can work our orders and rate equation from a table of initial rates and initial concentrations. Watch and learn!
Clear, Effective and briefly descriptive. Hats off to you
Thank you so much for this - my teacher has explained this countless times but I never got it. This is the first time I'm actually understanding what's going on.
Thank you so much for all of your hard work !
No problem!
This video makes so much more sense than your more difficult example. If anything, the other video confused me more than I already was
thank you soo much i scrolled through all videos but i couldn't understand at all but when i came to yours it made me understand soo fast even without replaying it
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I WAS STRUGGLING, I COULD NOT GET MY HEAD AROUND THIS TABLE, NOW I GET AN IDEA, THANK YOU!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Great video thank you I'm so glad I have discovered your channel
This make so much more sense now thanks
at 3:11 we know it quadrupled because 0.704÷0.176= 4 right? what if the answer comes in decimal like 4.125? do we just round it to 4?
Hi, this video really was really helpful, but I'm still confused about one thing.
I've seen questions like the one in the video but where more than one concentration is changed in a single reaction - where more than one concentration has an effect on the initial rate. How would you work out the order in this case?
Thanks xx
Nevermind, haha, I've found the other video. thanks anyway! Your videos have been super helpful, I just wish I'd found them sooner!
in the rate equation, do you still write O2 and CO to the power of one? Because they still have an affect on the overall order so should be put in the rate equation? but also thanks great video
this was very very helpful thank you so much
Thank you as ever! Xx
Hi fantastic video! Just a quick question: in some exam questions, when determining the order from a table for a particular reactant, the other reactants don't always necessarily stay the same and therefore change, making the question very difficult to tackle. how do we go about determining the order when the other reactants change?? thanks!
sorry I didn't realise you already did a video tackling my problem in the next video!
Hi thanks you so much for this ! Could you please go over hardest exam questions for each topic in f325 and if you habe time f324 thanks
+Erfanullah Mazloom Hi! Yes there are these vids on my channel already. Just take a look at my playlist. More of them on the way too.
+A Level Chemistry Revision Videos by Allery Tutors Could you please go over more f324 and f325 paper the ones you've done already are so good and helpful ?
+Erfanullah Mazloom Of course.
Thank you !!
You're welcome!
thank you so much!
You're welcome!
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I love you