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(b) The reaction is known to be first order with respect to bleach. In a second

ID: 962073 • Letter: #

Question

(b) The reaction is known to be first order with respect to bleach. In a second experiment, the student prepares solutions of food coloring and bleach with concentrations that differ from those used in the first experiment. When the solutions are combined, the student observes that the reaction mixture reaches an absorbance near zero too rapidly. In order to correct the problem, the student proposes the following three possible modifications to the experiment.

Increasing the temperature

Increasing the concentration of the food coloring

Increasing the concentration of the bleach

Circle the one proposed modification above that could correct the problem, and explain how that modification increases the time for the reaction mixture to reach an absorbance near zero.

(c) In another experiment, a student wishes to study the oxidation of red food coloring with bleach. How would the student need to modify the original experimental procedure to determine the order of the reaction with respect to the red food coloring?

Na2C37H34N2S3O9+OC products colorless blue 5. Blue food coloring can be oxidized by household bleach (which contains OCl) to form colorless products, as represented by the equation above. A student used a spectrophotometer set at a wavelength of 635 nm to study the absorbance of the food coloring over time during the bleaching process large excess so that the concentration of OCl is essentially constant throughout the reaction. The student used data from the study to generate the graphs below, . In the study, bleach is present in 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.0 -0.5 45 40 35 e 30 25 2 20 E 15 10 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 S-3.0 0.0 -4.0 0 0 20 40 60 80 100 Time (s) 0 20 40 60 80 100 Time (s) 0 20 40 60 80 100 Time (s) Graph I Graph II Graph III (a) Based on the graphs above, what is the order of the reaction with respect to the blue food coloring?

Explanation / Answer

(a) Based on the graphs above, what is the order of the reaction with respect to the blue food coloring?

First Order

(b)  Increasing the concentration of the food coloring.

If the initial concentration of blue food coloring is increased, then more time is required (regardless of the reaction order specified in part (a)) for the bleach to oxidise the additional blue food coloring.

(c) In another experiment, a student wishes to study the oxidation of red food coloring with bleach. How would the student need to modify the original experimental procedure to determine the order of the reaction with respect to the red food coloring?

The spectrophotometer should be set to a different wavelength.