gcsescience.com 9 gcsescience.com
Increasing the Surface Area of a Solid.
A solid in a solution
can only react when particles collide with the surface.
The bigger the area of the solid
surface,
the more particles can collide
with it per second,
and the faster the reaction rate
is.
You can increase the surface
area of a solid by breaking it up
into smaller pieces (see also nanoparticles).
A powder has the largest surface area
and will have the fastest reaction rate.
This is why catalysts are often used as powders.
In the reaction between calcium carbonate and dilute hydrochloric acid
HCl + calcium carbonate
calcium chloride + carbon
dioxide + water.
HCl(aq)
+ CaCO3(s)
CaCl2(aq)
+ CO2(g)
+ H2O(l)
calcium carbonate may be used in the form of marble chips.
The reaction rates can be
compared using large marble
chips,
and the same mass of small
marble chips.
The reaction can be followed by
plotting the loss of mass against
time.

The reaction rate is
faster (the slope is steeper)
for the reaction with small marble
chips (greater surface
area).
Note that the final loss of mass is
the same for both reactions.
This is because the same mass of calcium
carbonate (marble chips)
will
give the same mass of carbon
dioxide whether the chips are
large or small.
The smaller chips will just do it more
quickly.
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Copyright © 2008 Dr. Colin France. All Rights Reserved.