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Chemistry, 16.03.2020 19:31 lilblackbird4

Consider the following mechanism: (1) ClO−(aq) + H2O(l) ⇌ HClO(aq) + OH−(aq) [fast] (2) I−(aq) + HClO(aq) → HIO(aq) + Cl−(aq) [slow] (3) OH−(aq) + HIO(aq) → H2O(l) + IO−(aq) [fast] (a) What is the overall equation? Select the single best answer. ClO−(aq) + I−(aq) → IO−(aq) + H2O(l) + Cl−(aq) ClO−(aq) + I−(aq) ⇌ IO−(aq) + Cl−(aq) ClO−(aq) + I−(aq) ⇌ IO−(aq) + H2O(l) + Cl−(aq) ClO−(aq) + I−(aq) → IO−(aq) + Cl−(aq) (b) Identify the intermediate(s), if any. Select the single best answer. No intermediates Cl−, OH−, I−, ClO−, IO− HClO, OH−, HIO HClO, OH−, HIO, H2O (c) What are the molecularity and the rate law for each step? Select the single best answers. (1): bimolecular unimolecular termolecular rate = k1([HClO][OH−])/([HClO][OH−]) k1[HClO][OH−] k1[ClO−][H2O] (2): bimolecular unimolecular termolecular rate = k2[HIO][Cl−] k2([HIO][Cl−])/([I−][HClO]) k2[I−][HClO] (3): bimolecular unimolecular termolecular rate = k3[OH−][HIO] k3([H2O][IO−])/([OH−][HIO]) k3[H2O][IO−] (d) Is the mechanism consistent with the actual rate law: rate = k[ClO−][I−]? no yes

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Consider the following mechanism: (1) ClO−(aq) + H2O(l) ⇌ HClO(aq) + OH−(aq) [fast] (2) I−(aq) + HCl...

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