I'm trying to find the activation energy between sodium thiosulphate and iron (III) nitrate. The reaction starts off immediately with the thiosulphate and iron +3 ions forming an unstable complex (dark violet in colour), which slowly gets consumed as the thiosulphate reduces iron +3 to +2, returning to a colourless solution:
overall reaction: 2Na
2S
2O
3 + 2Fe(NO
3)
3 Na
2S
4O
6 + 2NaNO
3 + 2Fe(NO
3)
2unstable complex: 2S
2O
32- + Fe
3+ [Fe(S
2O
3)
2(H
2O)
2]
-I've varied concentration of each reactant at different temperatures to try and find the rate orders and the rate constant, however I'm getting strange results. For context, I'm using a colorimeter to measure the time taken to reach a certain absorbance. I've also tried to find literature data about this reaction but couldn't find much on it. I have several questions:
1. The rate of reaction appears to decrease every time I increase one of the concentrations. This goes against the usual trend of higher concentration having a faster rate, but it kind of makes sense because I've consequently increased the concentration of the unstable complex, so it must take longer to get consumed? I don't really understand how it works.
2. Since I'm measuring absorbance, I get a downwards sloping curve, which shows the reactants getting used up as opposed to the formation of products. How do I form a rate expression with this, I've only ever learned about the usual rate expression for products, so would the rate of reaction for the products be the same as just the negative of the rate for reactants? Is it correct to assume that the rate of the reactants depleting is the same as the rate of the products being formed (difference of a negative sign)?
3. This leads to another question, if the rate decreases as I increase concentration, does that mean the rate orders are negative? is that even possible?
Any help would be greatly appreciated, sorry for the wall of text.