Asked by Angie
How do you do the inverse of absolute temperature?
My kelvin temperatures are:
298
308
318
328
338
348
358
368
378
Taking the natural log of both sides of both sides of the equation gives ln(k) = ln(A) – E/RT. Thus, a graph of the natural log of the reaction rate constant versus the inverse of the absolute temperature should be linear. Create such a graph to verify this is true.
My kelvin temperatures are:
298
308
318
328
338
348
358
368
378
Taking the natural log of both sides of both sides of the equation gives ln(k) = ln(A) – E/RT. Thus, a graph of the natural log of the reaction rate constant versus the inverse of the absolute temperature should be linear. Create such a graph to verify this is true.
Answers
Answered by
DrBob222
298 = T
inverse is 1/T = 1/298
inverse is 1/T = 1/298
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