RankLab
Back to Questions
ChemistryMediumMCQ2022 · 28 Jul Shift 2

Q42.Dinitrogen and dioxygen the main constituents of air do not react with each other in atmosphere to form oxides of nitrogen because (1) N2 is unreactive in the condition of atmosphere. (2) Oxides of nitrogen are unstable. (3) Reaction between them can occur in the presence (4) The reaction is endothermic and require very of a catalyst. high temperature.

What This Question Tests

This question assesses the understanding of why nitrogen and oxygen do not react readily at atmospheric conditions, primarily due to the high bond energy of N2 and the endothermic nature of nitrogen oxide formation requiring high temperatures.

Concepts Tested

Chemical kineticsThermodynamicsBond dissociation energy

📚 NCERT Sections This Tests

4.11Explain Giving Reasons:

Chemistry Class 11 · Chapter 4

74% match

4.11 Explain giving reasons: (i) Transition metals and many of their compounds show paramagnetic behaviour. (ii) The enthalpies of atomisation of the transition metals are high. (iii) The transition metals generally form coloured compounds. (iv) Transition metals and their many compounds act as good catalyst.

3.22The Rate Constant For The Decomposition Of N2O5 At Various Temperatures

Chemistry Class 11 · Chapter 3

74% match

3.22 The rate constant for the decomposition of N2O5 at various temperatures is given below: T/°C 0 20 40 60 80 105 × k/s-1 0.0787 1.70 25.7 178 2140 Draw a graph between ln k and 1/T and calculate the values of A and Ea. Predict the rate constant at 30° and 50°C.

3.10In A Reaction Between A And B, The Initial Rate Of Reaction (R0) Was Measured

Chemistry Class 11 · Chapter 3

73% match

3.10 In a reaction between A and B, the initial rate of reaction (r0) was measured for different initial concentrations of A and B as given below: A/ mol L–1 0.20 0.20 0.40 B/ mol L–1 0.30 0.10 0.05 r0/mol L–1s–1 5.07 × 10–5 5.07 × 10–5 1.43 × 10–4 What is the order of the reaction with respect to A and B? 3.11 The following results have been obtained during the kinetic studies of the reaction: 2A + B ® C + D Experiment [A]/mol L–1 [B]/mol L–1 Initial rate of formation of D/mol L–1 min–1 I 0.1 0.1 6.0 × 10–3 II 0.3 0.2 7.2 × 10–2 III 0.3 0.4 2.88 × 10–1 IV 0.4 0.1 2.40 × 10–2 Determine the rate law and the rate constant for the reaction. 3.12 The reaction between A and B is first order with respect to A and zero order with respect to B. Fill in the blanks in the following table: Experiment [A]/ mol L–1 [B]/ mol L–1 Initial rate/ mol L–1 min–1 I 0.1 0.1 2.0 × 10–2 II – 0.2 4.0 × 10–2 III 0.4 0.4 – IV – 0.2 2.0 × 10–2 3.13 Calculate the half-life of a first order reaction from their rate constants given below: (i) 200 s–1 (ii) 2 min–1 (iii) 4 years–1 3.14 The half-life for radioactive decay of 14C is 5730 years. An archaeological artifact containing wood had only 80% of the 14C found in a living tree. Estimate the age of the sample. 3.15 The experimental data for decomposition of N2O5 [2N2O5 ® 4NO2 + O2] in gas phase at 318K are given below: t/s 0 400 800 1200 1600 2000 2400 2800 3200 102 × [N2O5]/ 1.63 1.36 1.14 0.93 0.78 0.64 0.53 0.43 0.35 mol L–1 (i) Plot [N2O5] against t. (ii) Find the half-life period for the reaction. (iii) Draw a graph between log[N2O5] and t. (iv) What is the rate law ? Chemistry 86 Reprint 2025-26 (v) Calculate the rate constant. (vi) Calculate the half-life period from k and compare it with (ii).