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Activation Energy

Revision as of 19:04, 27 October 2019 by NRJC (talk | contribs) (AQA)

Key Stage 4

Meaning

Activation energy is the amount of energy needed to begin a chemical reaction.

About Activation Energy

Foundation

Chemical reactions can't take place unless there is enough energy to cause the reactant molecules to collide and react.
Different reactions need different amount of activation energy to start.
The activation energy can be reached by heating the mixture of reactants until they have enough energy to react.
Sometimes reactants at room temperature have enough energy to react. If the mixture of reactants was lower than room temperature they might not have enough energy to begin reacting.
Once the activation energy is reached the reaction will continue as energy is released when chemical bonds form to make the products.

Higher

Activation energy is needed to allow the reactant molecules to collide with one another hard enough to break the bonds holding them together. This allows new bonds to form making the product.

Examples

ExothermicSketchGraphKS4.png
EndothermicSketchGraphKS4.png
The activation energy is shown in this reaction profile for an exothermic reaction. The activation energy is shown in this reaction profile for an endothermic reaction.

References

AQA

Activation energy, GCSE Chemistry; Student Book, Collins, AQA
Activation energy, page 233, GCSE Combined Science Trilogy 1, Hodder, AQA
Activation energy, pages 117, 130, 136, GCSE Chemistry; Third Edition, Oxford University Press, AQA
Activation energy, pages 122, GCSE Combined Science Trilogy 2, Hodder, AQA
Activation energy, pages 131, 151, GCSE Chemistry, Hodder, AQA
Activation energy, pages 136, 138, GCSE Combined Science; The Revision Guide, CGP, AQA
Activation energy, pages 156, 166, 167, GCSE Combined Science Trilogy; Chemistry, CGP, AQA
Activation energy, pages 181, 198, 199, GCSE Chemistry, CGP, AQA
Activation energy, pages 62, 67, GCSE Chemistry; The Revision Guide, CGP, AQA
Activation energy; and catalyst, page 153, GCSE Chemistry, Hodder, AQA
Activation energy; And catalysts, pages 124, GCSE Combined Science Trilogy 2, Hodder, AQA