Title: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 22 p721, 732743
1Unit 8 Kinetics and Equilibrium
- Chemical Kinetics Chapter 22 p721, 732-743
- The branch of Chemistry concerned with the
- Reaction rate
- Measured in
- Mechanism
rates of reactions and the mechanisms by which
reactions occur.
the speed at which a rxn occurs.
moles of product made ( or reactant used) per
unit time.
a series of steps by which reactant molecules
become product molecules.
2A. Collision Theory a simple mechanism
- Rxns occur when reactant molecules collide with
enough energy (activation energy) and at the
correct angle (orientation) - This is called an effective collision.
- ex. H2(g) I2(g) ? 2HI(g)
-
Enough energy
Correct orientation
Activated complex
Not enough energy
H2 I2 ? H2I2 ? 2HI
3Collision, Not Enough Energy
4Collision, Incorrect Orientation
5Effective Collision correct angle and
activation energy
6B. Factors Effecting Reaction Rate
- Anything that can increase the number of
collisions and/or make the collisions that do
occur more effective, will speed up a rxn. - Temperature (Heat) inc temp ? molecules move
faster ? more collisions and more effective
collisions ? inc rxn rate - Concentration of reactants inc concentration ?
more molecules ? more collisions ? inc rate - Pressure on Gases inc pressure ? dec volume ?
more collisions ? inc rate
7Collisions Changing Temperature
8Collisions Changing Concentration
9Collisions Changing Pressure
10- 4. Surface Area inc surface area between phases
in a heterogeneous system ? more collisions ? inc
rate rate - 5. Catalyst a substance that inc the rate of a
rxn without being used up in the reaction ?
causes collisions to be more effective ? inc rate - 6. Nature of reactants ? more reactive substance
? more effective collisions ? inc rate - ex. Al HCl ? AlCl3 H2 moderate
rate - Cu HCl ? CuCl2 H2 slow rate
- Ca HCl ? CaCl2 H2 fast rate
11Collisions Surface Area
12C. Energy Changes During Chemical Rxns
- Activation Energy (EA) Energy required to start
a chemical rxn. - Potential Energy of Reactants (Hreact) the
amount of energy contained in the bonds of the
reactant molecules. - Potential Energy of Products (Hprod) products
- Heat of Reaction ( ?Hrxn) the heat change
during a chemical reaction - ?Hrxn Hprod H react
13D. Endothermic and Exothermic Reactions
- Exothermic Products have less energy than
reactants, Hprodlt Hreact then ?H neg. and is
written as a product when written in an equation. - ex. 2H2 O2 ? 2H2O 483.6kJ ?H
483.6kJ - Endothermic Products have more energy than
reactants, Hprod gt Hreact then ?H pos. and is
written as a reactant when written in an
equation. - ex. N2 2O2 66.4kJ ? 2NO2 ?H 66.4kJ
- Values for Heats of Reaction are given in Table
I. - What is the ?H value for the combustion of CH4?
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15E. Potential Energy Diagrams
- A Potential Energy Diagram is a graph of the P.E.
change over time as a reaction occurs. - ex. H2 I2 ? H2I2 ? 2HI
POTENTIAL
H2I2
ENERGY
EA
2HI
HAct Comp
?HRxn
HProd
H2 I2
HReact
TIME (REACTION COORDINATE)
16Potential Energy Diagram an Unsuccessful
Collision
17Potential Energy Diagram a Successful Collision
18F. Endo/Exo and the Potential Energy Diagram
- Endothermic Rxns absorb energy, HprodgtHreact
- and, on the P.E. Diagram Hprod is higher than
Hreact.
- Exothermic Rxns emit energy, HprodltHreact and,
- on the P.E. Diagram Hprod is lower than Hreact.
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20G. Catalyst and the P.E. Diagram
- A Catalyst Changes the reaction mechanism by
making a different activated complex that is more
stable, lower energy.
HAct Comp
EA
Cat
Catalyzed reaction pathway
EA and HAct Comp become lower Cat changes Act!
HAct Comp
- This gives the reaction a lower energy pathway to
make the products, with a lower activation
energy. This makes collisions more effective!
21H. Reverse Rxn. A rxn in which product
molecules can collide to reform reactant
molecules. ex. rechargeable battery
A B ? AB
A B ? AB
EA For
EA Rev
A B
?H
AB
FWD
RVS
The only value that changes is EA because the
reverse reaction starts with the products. ?H is
the same value, but has opposite sign.
Notice ?H EA For EA Rev
22II. Equilibrium Chap. 16 p535 to 540 and p548
to 555
- Equilibrium can only exist for a reversible
process in a closed container. ( called a closed
system) - At equilibrium, the rate of a forward process
equals the rate of a reverse process! - At equilibrium, a change appears to stop.
- At equilibrium, amounts of reactant and products
no longer change but amounts are not equal.
Ratefor Raterev
Amt. of reactant ? Amt. of product
These values dont change Amounts, Pressure,
Color,
Temperature, Volume
23Example of an Equilibrium
24Chemical Equilibrium
25A. Types of Equilibrium
- Phase Equilibrium Two phases of a pure
substance in a closed container (thermos bottle)
will reach equilibrium. ex. H2O(l) ? H2O(g)
- Solution Equilibrium Saturation equilibrium
between dissolved and undissolved solute.
26ex. C12H22O11(s) ? C12H22O11(aq)
Saturated sugar solution
Dissolved sugar molecules
Undissolved sugar cube
- Chemical Equilibrium A reversible chemical rxn
in a closed container will reach equilibrium. - ex. H2(g) I2(g) ? 2HI(g)
Start of Rxn, only reactant molecules
5 H2s 4 I2s
27During Rxn
4 H2s 3 I2s 2 HIs
At Equilibrium
2 H2s 1 I2 6 HIs
Notice when reactants change to products, other
products change to reactants
28H2
I2
HI
29For.
Rev.
30B. LeChateliers Principle
- When a stress is placed on a system at
equilibrium, the equilibrium point will shift to
relieve the stress. - What is a stress? the addition of more of a
reactant or product, changing temperature or
pressure. All of these changes put a stress on a
closed system. - What is a shift? shift right means that the
forward rxn speeds up more than the reverse,
setting up a new equilibrium in which more
product is made. Shift left means the reverse
speeds up more making more reactants.
311. Changing Concentration of a Reactant
- Adding more of a reactant (inc. concentration)
causes more collisions between reactant
molecules, making more product
Add more I2 to our previous equilibrium 2H2s,
4I2s, 6HIs
Notice adding more of a reactant makes more
product and less of the other reactant a shift
right! 1H2, 3I2s, 8HIs
32- Eventually, as more product is made, the reverse
reaction speeds up too until its rate equals the
rate of the forward reaction, and a new
equilibrium is reached! - This new equilibrium will contain more of the
products and less of all reactants except the one
added. - Add react. ? Eq. shifts right ? more prod. made
- Add prod. ? Eq. shifts left ? more react. made
- Remove react.? Eq. shifts left? more react.
- Remove prod.? Eq. shifts right? more prod.
- Add/Away Take/ Toward
33- ex. 2CoCl2 2HCl heat ? 2CoCl3 H2O
- If more HCl is added to the above
equilibrium, in which direction will the
equilibrium shift? - How will the amount of CoCl2 change?
- Amount of CoCl3?
- H2O? amount of or
concentration of - If more H2O is added?
- CoCl2?
HCl?
CoCl3?
If H2O is removed?
CoCl2?
HCl?
CoCl3?
34- ex. 2K2CrO4 2HCl ? K2Cr2O7 2KCl H2O
- If HCl (an acid) is removed by neutralizing
it with NaOH (a base), which direction will the
equilibrium shift and how will amounts of other
substances change? - Remove (take) HCl, equilibrium shifts to the
left - amount of
K2CrO4 increases - amount of
K2Cr2O7 decreases - amount of KCl
decreases - amount of H2O
decreases
352. Changing Temperature
- When you increase the temperature on a system at
equilibrium, you increase the rate of both the
forward and reverse reactions, but not equally! - The endothermic direction will speed up more than
the other direction causing an equilibrium shift
in that direction. - Since changing temp. changes the amount of heat
energy to the reaction, and since heat energy can
be written into reactions, we can still use the
add/away, take/toward rule!
36- ex. 2CoCl2 2HCl heat ? 2CoCl3 H2O
- If the temperature is increased at constant
pressure, in which direction will the equilibrium
shift? How will the amounts of all chemicals
change? - Inc Temp? Add Heat ? Rxn shifts to the Right
- CoCl2 and HCl will decrease
- CoCl3 and H2O will increase
- ex. N2(g) 3H2(g) ? 2NH3(g) 91.8kJ
- Should the temperature be increased or
decreased in order to make more product, NH3?
373. Changing Pressure
- Inc Pressure on an equilibrium causes the Volume
of Gases only to decrease. - The reaction will shift to relieve that stress
Shift toward the side with fewer gas molecules.
ex. N2(g) 3H2(g) ? 2NH3(g)
Original Equilib.
Inc. Pressure
Molecules too close together. Fewer
molecules lowers pressure
38- ex. N2(g) 3H2(g) ? 2NH3(g)
- If the pressure is increased on the above
equilibrium, in which direction will the
equilibrium shift and how would the concentration
of all substances change? - Inc P ? Dec Vol? shift to side with fewer gas
mol. Shift Right N2 and H2 dec - NH3 inc
- If the pressure on the reaction is decreased,
in which direction will equilibrium shift? - Dec P? Inc Vol ? shift to side with more gas
mol. - Shift Left
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404. Adding a Catalyst
- Adding a Catalyst speeds up a rxn in both the
forward and reverse directions.
EA
EA
for
rev
- It does this by lowering the Activation Energy
for both the forward and reverse rxn equally,
both rxns speed up equally. Therefore, a
catalyst does not shift an equilibrium.
41III. Thermodynamics and Spontaneous Rxns
- Thermodynamics is the study of energy changes.
- For a reversible rxn, one direction will be
observed to occur spontaneously in nature, the
other direction will only occur by the addition
or removal of energy. (One direction is said to
be favored over the other.) - There are two rules in Thermodynamics that decide
which direction is favored, that is, the
spontaneous direction.
42A. Rules for Determining Favored Direction
- First Law of Thermodynamics (Rule 1) In an open
system, changes tend to occur spontan-eously if
they lead to lower energy (enthalpy). - Enthalpy potential energy or heat content (H)
- ?H also called change in Enthalpy
- If ?H is negative (exothermic), forward rxn is
more likely to be favored. - If ?H is positive (endothermic), reverse rxn is
more likely to be favored.
432. Second Law of Thermodynamics (Rule 2)
- In an open system, changes tend to occur
spontane-ously if they lead towards more disorder
(entropy). - Entropy (S) the measure of the disorder in a
system ?S the entropy change - Low Entropy ?S Pos
High Entropy -
-
Solid Liquid
Gas
Molecule Smaller Molecules Individual
Atoms
Substance Solution
Heterogeneous Mixture
?S Positive forward rxn is more likely
spontaneous ?S Negative reverse rxn is more
likely spontaneous
44- ex. Tell the changes lead to an increase (?S
pos) or a decrease (?S neg) in Entropy. - 1. CaCO3(s) ? CaO(s) CO2(g)
- 2. S8(s) 8O2(g) ? 8SO2(g)
- 3. NaOH(s) Na(aq) OH (aq)
-
H2O
B. Combining the Two Rules
?H ?S Is Forward Rxn Spontaneous?
( ) ( )
Yes
( ) ( )
No, Reverse is.
( ) ( )
Maybe, at higher temp.
( ) ( )
Maybe, at lower temp.