Hi all, I'm a high school student and I've just made my account here because I need a little bit of help. Chemistry is my favourite subject and I really want/need to know about analyzing my data.
As the topic is on reaction rate, I picked the reaction between sodium thiosulphate and hydrochloric acid and the effects of concentration on reaction rate. It was a very common experiment among the students this year and the past year and was a reaction that provided results that gave a lot of information to talk about in the EEI (as I've heard) to show the teacher my investigation of the reaction.
The basic method involved drawing a cross on a piece of paper and putting a beaker above it. Next, two known concentrations of sodium thiosulphate and HCl were poured into a beaker and the time was measured for the sulfur precipitate to form to a level where you could no longer see the cross on the paper.
Now I understand that the use of the cross and paper is to just ensure that when the concentration is changed in later tests, that you have a consistent point where you know the reaction is at. I understand that the sulfur colloid does not mean that the reaction is necessarily completed when you cannot see the cross, its just an indicator for reference. We conducted the experiment with 5 different concentrations of both HCl and sodium thio, these were 0.2, 0.4, 0.6, 0.8 and 1.0M. So we had 25 tests at different moralities of each and conducted 3 trials at each concentration combination, giving us 75 total trials.
I'd read online and in textbooks about the reaction order of experiments and the rate equation. My teacher had told us to plot our concentrations against time and then with ln(concentration) vs. time and finally 1/concentration vs. time to determine our reaction order with respect to the concentration of HCl and sodium thiosulphate.
I read online to figure out why we used the natural log (ln) and the inverse of the concentration and stumbled across the differential rate laws and their integrated forms. Ultimately, I wanted to determine the reaction order and show some worthwhile graphs. We found HCl to fit the ln conc. vs. time graph with the greatest accuracy and the 1/concentration vs. time graph for the sodium thio. If I'm correct, these signify a first order and second order reaction with respect to each reagent.
Jumping ahead I realised that the gradient would be equal to -k for zero/first order reactions and k for second order reactions. I understood the differential and integrated rate laws and then planned to make a few extra graphs of reaction rate vs. (concentration)2 to support my findings. I then attempted to determine the reaction rate of each concentration test when I realised that we can't actually calculate reaction rate...
Sorry for writing up so much text and I know it's stupid that I did not see this earlier, I just hope that my position is understood.
With the data I have, are the only graphs I can make; concentration vs. time, ln(concentration) vs. time and 1/concentration vs. time?
Does this mean that the rate constant, k, cannot be calculated, neither can the reaction rate since I do not know the final concentration of the products/reactants?
Finally, is there any high-school level way of still calculating reaction order?
I really need some guidance on what I can do with my data.
Thanks