Chemical Kinetics studies the speed or rate at which chemical reactions occur. Understanding kinetics is crucial for NEET, as it explains why reactions take time, what factors influence their speed, and how reaction mechanisms work.
Focuses on rate of reaction, factors affecting rate, and theoretical models.
Conceptual understanding is more important than solving numerical rate equations.
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1. Chemical Arithmetic |
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2. Structure of Atom |
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3. Chemical Bonding and Molecular Structure |
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4. Solutions |
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5. The Solid State |
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6. Gaseous State |
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7. Nuclear Chemisty |
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8. Chemical Equilibrium |
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9. Ionic Equilibrium |
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10. Thermodynamics |
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11. Chemical Kinetics |
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12. Electrochemistry |
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14. Surface Chemistry |
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15. Chemical Periodicity |
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16. General Principles Of Extraction Of Metals |
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17. Hydrogen |
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18. s and p-Block Elements |
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19. The d-and f-Block Elements |
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20. Co-Ordination Chemistry |
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21. Chemical Analysis |
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22. Purification, Classification & Nomenclature Of Organic Compounds |
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23. Organic Chemistry – Some Basic Principles & Techniques |
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24. Hydrocarbons |
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25. Halogen Containing Compounds |
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26. Alcohols, Phenols and Ethers |
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27. Aldehydes And Ketones |
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28. Carboxylic Acids & Their Derivatives |
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29. Nitrogen Containing Compounds |
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30. Polymers |
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31. Biomolecules |
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32. Chemistry In Action |
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33. Chemistry Formula PDF for Entrance Exam |
Definition: Rate of reaction is the change in concentration of reactants or products per unit time.
Conceptually:
Faster reactions → higher rate
Slower reactions → lower rate
Key Points:
Rate depends on nature of reactants, concentration, temperature, pressure, and catalyst presence.
Rate is dynamic, measured as disappearance of reactants or appearance of products.
NEET Tip: Remember that rate is a macroscopic measure of molecular events.
1. Nature of Reactants:
Some substances react faster due to bond strength and molecular structure.
Example: Ionic reactions in aqueous solution are faster than covalent bond-breaking reactions.
2. Concentration:
Higher concentration → more frequent collisions → higher reaction rate.
3. Temperature:
Increase in temperature → molecules move faster → more collisions → higher reaction rate.
Rule of thumb: Reaction rate roughly doubles for every 10°C rise.
4. Pressure (for gases):
Increase in pressure → molecules are closer → collision frequency increases → higher rate.
5. Surface Area:
Solid reactants with larger surface area react faster.
6. Catalyst:
Catalyst provides an alternate pathway with lower activation energy.
Increases rate without being consumed.
NEET Tip: Conceptual questions often test effects of temperature, concentration, and catalysts on rate.
Explains reaction rates in terms of molecular collisions.
Key idea: Reaction occurs when molecules collide with proper orientation and sufficient energy (activation energy, Ea).
Important Points:
Not all collisions lead to reaction.
Fraction of collisions with enough energy is given by Arrhenius equation (conceptually).
NEET Focus: Understand orientation and energy requirements for successful collisions.
Minimum energy required for reactants to form products.
Lower Ea → faster reaction
Higher Ea → slower reaction
Conceptual Understanding:
Catalyst lowers Ea → more molecules overcome energy barrier → increased rate.
Temperature increases fraction of molecules with energy ≥ Ea → increased rate.
Definition: Sum of powers of concentration terms in the rate law.
Conceptually:
Zero-order: Rate independent of concentration
First-order: Rate ∝ [Reactant]
Second-order: Rate ∝ [Reactant]²
NEET Tip: Focus on conceptual understanding of how concentration affects rate rather than memorizing equations.
Rate law: Rate=k[A]m[B]nRate = k[A]^m[B]^nRate=k[A]m[B]n (conceptual view)
k = rate constant, depends on temperature and catalyst.
Reaction rate is proportional to reactant concentrations raised to the order.
NEET Tip: Emphasize conceptual reasoning for reaction order and rate dependence.
Shows how concentration changes with time.
Key idea: Rate decreases as reactants are consumed.
Zero, first, and second-order reactions show distinct patterns of concentration change.
NEET Focus: Conceptual understanding of time-dependence of concentration rather than calculation.
Reaction mechanism: Step-by-step sequence by which reactants convert to products.
Elementary step: Individual reaction step in mechanism.
Molecularity: Number of reactant molecules involved in an elementary step.
NEET Tip: Identify rate-determining step (slowest step) to conceptually explain overall rate.
Temperature, catalyst, pressure, and concentration may alter mechanism or rate-determining step.
Conceptually, the overall reaction rate depends on slowest elementary step.
1. Industrial Chemistry:
Optimizing reaction conditions (temperature, pressure, catalyst) to increase product yield.
Example: Haber process for ammonia synthesis.
2. Biological Systems:
Enzyme-catalyzed reactions increase rate of biochemical processes.
3. Environmental Chemistry:
Reaction rates explain pollutant degradation and atmospheric chemistry.
NEET Tip: Link kinetics concepts to real-life applications for reasoning-based questions.
| Concept | Key Points | NEET Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Rate of Reaction | Change in concentration/time | Fast vs slow reactions |
| Factors Affecting Rate | Concentration, temperature, pressure, surface area, catalyst | Conceptual MCQs |
| Collision Theory | Reaction occurs if molecules collide with correct orientation & energy | Orientation & activation energy |
| Activation Energy | Minimum energy required for reaction | Catalyst lowers Ea |
| Order of Reaction | Sum of powers in rate law | Zero, first, second-order concepts |
| Rate Law | Rate = k[A]^m[B]^n | Conceptual dependence on concentration |
| Reaction Mechanism | Stepwise process | Rate-determining step concept |
| Applications | Industrial, biological, environmental | Real-life relevance |
Chemical Kinetics is a key chapter for NEET Chemistry, explaining reaction rates, factors influencing rate, collision theory, activation energy, reaction order, and mechanisms. Conceptual understanding is more important than calculations because NEET emphasizes reasoning-based questions and real-life applications. Linking kinetic principles to industrial, biological, and environmental processes ensures students can answer both theoretical and applied questions confidently. StudentBro.in provides structured, conceptual notes to help NEET aspirants master Chemical Kinetics efficiently.