April 16, 2024, 08:47:02 AM
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Topic: Why does a strong acid+metal reaction have a lower activation energy than a weak  (Read 4925 times)

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blueboing

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Hello, I have been doing some experiements designed to find out the difference in activation energy when reacting magnesium ribbon with Hydrochloric acid and magnesium ribbon with ethanoic acid. I worked out that the activation energy for the HCl experiment was 12.6KJ and the ethanoic experiment was 28.4KJ. I just wanted to know if anyone knows any theory behind this. Thanks

Offline Hello12

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Maybe because the bonds in the stronger acids are weaker, and the bonds in the weak acids are stronger. Or it could be to do with the number of H+ ions

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