Title: Chemical Kinetics
1Chemical Kinetics
- Rates of Reactions
- Rate and Concentration
- Finding Rate Laws
- First-Order Reactions
- Rate and Temperature
- Theory of Reaction Rates
- Reaction Mechanisms
- Catalysts
- Steady-State Approximations
2Reaction Rate The Central Focus of Chemical
Kinetics
3Some Reactions are Fast and Others are Slow. Why?
Reactions of gases can be very fast, or very
slow, even though the gases may be able to
diffuse very fast. Why is this?
H2 (g) F2 (g) 2 HF(g)
(very fast!)
3 H2 (g) N2 (g) 2 NH3 (g)
(very slow!)
The reaction of metals with water can also occur
fast or slow, and the speed of these chemical
reactions depends upon the chemistry of the metal
and the reactivity of the water molecule. Why ?
Mg(s) 2 H2O(l) Mg2(aq) 2 OH-(aq)
H2 (g) (slow)
Ba(s) 2 H2O(l) Ba2(aq) 2 OH-(aq)
H2 (g) (fast)
4There are Several Important Reasons that
Different Reactions, and Even the Same Chemical
Reaction May Go at Different Rates
1) Concentration molecules must collide in order
to react. Reaction rate is proportional to
the concentration of reactants. Rate k
(collision frequency) k (concentration)
2) Physical state molecules must mix in order to
collide. The physical state (solid, liquid,
gas) will affect frequency of collisions, as
well as the physical size of droplets (liquid) or
particles in the case of solids.
3) Temperature molecules must collide with
enough energy and
correct orientation to react. Raising the
temperature increases the reaction rate by
increasing the number of collisions, and
especially, the energy of the collisions.
5The Effect of Surface Area on Reaction Rate
Hot Steel wool in O2
Hot Nail in O2
6Collision Energy and Reaction Rate Bimolecular
7Rates of reactions
- Rate of a chemical reaction.
- The change in the quantity of a reactant or
product that takes place in a period of time. - rate
-
-
8Rates of reactions
- To study rates of reaction, you must
- Identify the reactants and products.
- Carry out the reaction.
- Measure the concentrations of one of the
reactants or products at known intervals. - You must have a way to measure at least one of
the species involved. - Continuous monitoring methods should be used
whenever possible.
9An example reaction
- Decomposition of N2O5.
- Dinitrogen pentoxide is known to decompose
completely by the following reaction. - 2N2O5 (g) ? 2N2O4 (g) O2 (g)
- This reaction can be conducted in an inert
solvent like carbon tetrachloride. - When N2O5 decomposes, N2O4 remains in solution
and O2 escapes and can be measured.
10An example reaction
- We can easily measure the oxygen as dinitrogen
pentoxide decomposes. - Temperature must be maintained to within 0.01
oC. - The reaction flask must be shaken to keep oxygen
from forming a supersaturated solution.
11An example reaction
Gas buret
Constant temperature bath
12An example reaction
- Time (s) Volume STP O2, mL
- 0 0
- 300 1.15
- 600 2.18
- 900 3.11
- 1200 3.95
- 1800 5.36
- 2400 6.50
- 3000 7.42
- 4200 8.75
- 5400 9.62
- 6600 10.17
- 7800 10.53
Here are the results for our experiment.
13An example reaction
Volume, mL O2
The rate of O2 production slows down with time.
Time, s
14Average rates
- We can calculate the average rate of oxygen
formation during any time interval as - Average rate of
- O2 formation
The rates shown here have units of mL O2 at
STP/s. Note how the rate decreases with time.
15Instantaneous rates
- We know that the rate of our reaction is
constantly changing with time. - Instantaneous rate
- The rate of reaction at any point in time.
- It can be found by taking the tangent of our
earlier plot. - Initial rate of reaction
- The rate of formation at time zero when the
reactants are initially mixed.
Volume, mL O2
Time, s
16An example reaction, again
- Since we know what the stoichiometry for our
reaction is, we can calculate the concentration
of N2O5 during our reaction. - 2N2O5 (g) 2N2O4 (g) O2 (g)
- For each mole of O2 produced, two moles of N2O5
will have decomposed. - The rate of reaction will be
- rate of reaction -
1 2
17An example reaction, again
Volume, mL O2
N2O5
Time, s
18The Rate of Reaction
- Consider the hypothetical reaction,
- A(g) B(g) C(g) D(g)
- equimolar amounts of reactants, A B, will be
consumed and products, C D, will be formed as
indicated in this graph
19A(g) B(g) C(g) D(g)
- A concentration of A in M ( mol/L)
- Note that rxn does not go to completion
20Generic Rate Equation
21The Rate of Reaction
- Rate of a simple one-step reaction is directly
proportional to the concentration of the reacting
substance - R is the rate of the reaction
- k specific rate constant
22The Rate of Reaction
- For a simple rate-law expression like
- R kA
- doubling the initial concentration of A doubles
the initial rate of reaction - halving the initial concentration of A halves the
initial rate of reaction
23The Rate of Reaction
- Very often, more than one reactant molecule
appears in the equation for a one-step reaction - experimentally determine that reaction rate
?
24The Rate of Reaction
- Rate Law Expressions must be determined
experimentally - cannot be determined from balanced equations
- most chemical reactions are not one-step
reactions - Rate law expressions are also called
- rate laws
- rate equations
- rate expressions
25Rate and concentration
- We can develop a quantitative relationship
between instantaneous rates and concentration. - By drawing tangents along the curve for N2O5,
we can measure the following rates of reaction.
26Rate and concentration
- The earlier data indicated that the rate is
directly proportional to concentration. - rate k N2O5
- We can verify this by calculating the value for
k for the various rates we measured.
272H2O2(aq) ---gt 2H2O(l) O2(g)
- How can we find the rate of this reaction?
- Decrease of H2O2
- Increase of H2O or O2
- Evolution of a gas - moles/liter per unit time
28Average Rate
29Average Rate
30Reaction rates
- The rate of formation of a product is always a
positive quantity - The rate of disappearance of a reactant is always
a negative quantity - The rate of appearance and disappearance of
reactants and products is stoichiometric
2H2O2(aq) ---gt 2H2O(l) O2(g)
31Rate of reaction
2H2O2(aq) ---gt 2H2O(l) O2(g)
- Rate of Reaction?
- Positive quantity
- remove the stoichiometry (based on per mole)
32The Rate of Reaction
- Order of a reaction
- expressed in terms of either
- each reactant
- overall reaction
- For example
33The Rate of Reaction
If the rate law does not match the
stoichiometry? Not a single-step reaction!
34The Rate of Reaction
35The Rate of Reaction
- Look at the following one step reaction and its
experimentally determined rate-law expression - because it is a second order rate-law expression
- doubling the A increases the rate of reaction
by a factor of 4 - 22 4
- halving the A decreases the rate of reaction
by a factor of 4 - (½)2 ¼
36Rate and concentration
- For the general reaction
- a A b B . . . e E f F .
. . - the rate expression will often have the form of
- rate k Ax By . . .
- k rate constant
- x, y order for A B, respectively
- x y order for the reaction
- Note The order is NOT the same as the
- coefficients for the balanced reaction.
37Reaction mechanisms
- Elementary process
- Each step in a mechanism.
- Molecularity
- The number of particles that come together to
form the activated complex in an elementary
process. - 1 - unimolecular
- 2 - bimolecular
- 3 - termolecular
38Elementary Reactions and Molecularity Rate Laws
and Mechanism
39Fig 14-2
Pg 646
A unimolecular elementary reaction may involve
bond breakage. If an N2O4 molecule possesses
enough energy, the vibration can break the N-N
bond to produce two NO2 molecules.
40Reaction mechanisms
- For elementary processes, the exponents for each
species in the rate law are the same as the
coefficients in the equation for the step. - For our earlier example,
- the rate law is
- rate k NO O3
41Reaction mechanisms
- In general, the rate law gives the composition of
the activated complex. - The power of a species in the rate law is the
same as the number of particles of the species in
the activated complex. - If the exponents in the rate law are not the same
as the coefficients of the equation for the
reaction, the overall reaction must consist of
more than one step.
42Pg 645A
Bimolecular reaction
If this was an elementary reaction rate k
NO22
43Pg 645B
44Proposed Mechanism
45Alternative Mechanism
46rate k NO22 Slow first Step Matches
Stoichiometry
47Fig 14-14
Pg 674
H2 Br2 ? 2 HBr
A molecular view of the accepted mechanism for
the accepted mechanism for the reaction of H2 and
Br2 to produce 2 HBr.
48Pg 675
49Example 14-9
Pg 676
50Pg 675
What would the proposed rate law be?
51Finding rate laws
- Method of initial rates.
- The order for each reactant is found by
- Changing the initial concentration of that
reactant. - Holding all other initial concentrations and
conditions constant. - Measuring the initial rates of reaction
- The change in rate is used to determine the order
for that specific reactant. The process is
repeated for each reactant.
52N2O5 example
2N2O5 (g) ? 2N2O4 (g) O2 (g)
- The following data was obtained for the
decomposition of N2O5. - Experiment N2O5 Initial rate, M/s
- 1 0.100 3.62 x 10-5
- 2 0.200 7.29 x 10-5
- We know that the rate expression is
- rate k N2O5x
- Our goal is to determine what x (the order) is.
53N2O5 example
- For exp. 2 7.29 x 10-5 M/s k (0.200 M)x
- For exp. 1 3.62 x 10-5 M/s k (0.100 M)x
- We can now divide the equation for experiment
two by the one for experiment one. - 7.29 x 10-5 M/s k (0.200 M)x
- 3.62 x 10-5 M/s k (0.100 M)x
- which give 2.01 (2.00)x
- and x 1 (first order reaction)
54A more complex example
- The initial rate of reaction was obtained for the
following reaction under the conditions listed. - A B C . . .
- Exp. A B C
Initial rate, M/s - 1 0.030 0.010 0.050 1.7 x 10-8
- 2 0.060 0.010 0.050 6.8 x
10-8 - 3 0.030 0.020 0.050 4.9 x 10-8
- 4 0.030 0.010 0.100 1.7 x 10-8
- With this series of experiments, the
concentration of a single reactant is doubled in
concentration for experiments 2-4, compared to
experiment one.
55A more complex example
- While this type of problem is more time
consuming, its not any more difficult than the
previous example. - Order for A
- Use experiments one and two.
- 6.8 x 10-8 M/s (0.060 M)x
- 1.7 x 10-8 M/s (0.030 M)x
-
- 4.0 (2.0)x
- By inspection, x 2
56A more complex example
- Order for B
- Use experiments one and three.
- 4.9 x 10-8 M/s (0.010 M)y
- 1.7 x 10-8 M/s (0.020 M)y
- 2.9 (2.0)y
- The order is not obvious by inspection. You
must take the logarithm of both sides and solve
for y. - ln 2.9 y ln 2.0
- y 1.54 or
3 2
57A more complex example
- Order for C
- Use experiments one and four.
- Experiment C Initial Rate
- 1 0.050 1.7 x 10-8
- 4 0.100 1.7 x 10-8
- Here the rate did not change when C was
doubled. This is an example of a zero order
reaction. - z 0
58A more complex example
- We can now write the overall rate law.
- rate A2 B3/2 C0
- or since C has no effect on the rate
- rate A2 B3/2
- The overall order for the reaction is
- x y z 2 3/2 0 3 1/2
59Determining Reaction Order from the Rate Law
Problem For each of the following reactions,
determine the reaction order with respect to
each reactant and the overall order of the given
rate law a) 5 Br-(aq) BrO3-(aq) 6 H(aq)
3 Br2 (aq) 3 H2O(aq)
b) 2 NO(g)
2 H2 (g) N2 (g) 2 H2O(g)
Rate kNO2H2 PlanWe inspect the exponents
in the rate law, not the coefficients of
the balanced equation, to find the individual
orders, and then take their sum to obtain the
overall reaction order.
Rate kBrBrO3-H2
Solution a) The reaction is first order with
respect to Br- and BrO3- and second
order with respect to H. The reaction is fourth
order overall. b) The reaction is
second order in NO and first order in H2 and
third order overall.
60Integrated rate laws
- Integrate this eqn. over time from zero to
infinity
61Finding Rate Laws
- Using graphical method
- based on integrated rate laws
zero order for A
first order for A
second order for A
622H2O2(aq) ---gt 2H2O(l) O2(g)
- How can we find the rate of this reaction?
- Decrease of H2O2
- Increase of H2O or O2
- Evolution of a gas - moles/liter per unit time
63Zero Order?
64First Order?
65Second Order?
66First Order
67Finding rate laws
- Graphical method.
- Using integrated rate laws, one can produce
straight line plots. The order for a reactant if
verified if the data fits the plot. - Rate integrated Graph
Slope - Order law rate law
vs. time - 0 rate k At -kt A0
At -k - 1 rate kA lnAt -kt lnA0
lnAt -k - 2 ratekA2 kt
k
68Finding rate laws
0 order plot
2nd order plot
N2O5
1/N2O5
Time (s)
Time (s)
Time (s)
As you can see from these plots of the N2O5 data,
only a first order plot results in a straight
line.
1st order plot
lnN2O5
69Reaction profile
This type of plot shows the energy changes
during a reaction.
Potential Energy
activation energy
?H
Reaction coordinate
70Effective collision
Activated Complex
A temporary state where bonds are in the process
of breaking and forming.
71Examples of reaction profiles
Exothermic reaction
Endothermic reaction
72Reaction mechanisms
- A detailed molecular-level picture of how a
reaction might take place.
activated complex
bonds in the process of breaking or
being formed
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77First order reactions
- Reactions that are first order with respect to a
reactant are of great importance. - Describe how many drugs pass into the blood
stream or used by the body. - Often useful in geochemistry
- Radioactive decay
- Half-life (t1/2)
- The time required for one-half of the quantity
of reactant originally present to react.
78Half-Life
79Using the Integrated rate law
- Find value of k from the slope
- Given the rate constant you can calculate
- time to reach a certain concentration
- concentration reached in a given time
- the initial concentration, given some conc. with
time - Half-Life time for reactant to decrease by
1/2
80Use of 1/2 Life
- C4H8(g) --gt 2C2H4 (g) First Order Reaction
- At 1000C k 87 s-1
- What is the 1/2 life?
- So 50 is gone after 8ms
- After 24ms how much is gone?
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82Use of 1/2 Life
of t1/2s 0 1 2 3 4
Percent Left 100 50 25 12.5 6.25
83Theories of reaction rates
- Collision theory
- Based on kinetic-molecular theory.
- It assumes that reactants must collide for a
reaction to occur. - They must hit with sufficient energy and with the
proper orientation so as to break the original
bonds and form new ones. - As temperature is increased, the average kinetic
energy increases - so will the rate. - As concentration increases, the number of
collisions will also increase, also increasing
the rate.
84Rate and temperature
- Reaction rates are temperature dependent.
Here are rate constants for N2O5 decomposition at
various temperatures. T, oC k x 104, s-1
20 0.235 25 0.469 30
0.933 35 1.82 40 3.62 45
6.29
k x 104 (s-1)
Temperature (oC)
85Rate and temperature
- The relationship between rate constant and
temperature is mathematically described by the
Arrhenius equation. - k A e
- A constant
- Ea activation energy
- T temperature, Kelvin
- R gas law constant
-Ea / RT
86Rate and temperature
- An alternate form of the Arrhenius equation is
- ln k ln A
- If ln k is plotted against 1/T, a straight line
of slope -Ea/RT is obtained. - Activation energy - Ea
- The energy that molecules must have in order to
react.
87Calculation of Ea from N2O5 data
ln k
T-1
88Temperature and Ea
- As the temperature is increased, a higher
fraction of molecules will have a kinetic energy
that is greater that the activation energy.
T1 lt T2 lt T3
89Transition state theory
- As reactants collide, they initially form an
activated complex. - The activated complex is in the transition state.
- It lasts for approximately 10-100 fs.
- It can then form products or reactants.
- Once products are formed, it is much harder to
return to the transition state, for exothermic
reactions. - Reaction profiles can be used to show this
process.
90Reaction Mechanisms
- Consider the following reaction.
- 2NO2 (g) F2 (g) 2NO2F (g)
- If the reaction took place in a single step the
rate law would be - rate k NO22 F2
- However, the experimentally observed rate law is
- rate k NO2 F2
91Reaction Mechanisms
- Since the observed rate law is not the same as if
the reaction took place in a single step, we know
two things. - More than one step must be involved
- The activated complex must be produced from two
species. - A possible reaction mechanism might be
- Step one NO2 F2 NO2F F
- Step two NO2 F NO2F
- Overall 2NO2 F2 2NO2F
92Reaction Mechanisms
- Rate-determining step.
- When a reaction occurs in a series of steps,
with one slow step, it is the slow step that
determines the overall rate. - Step one NO2 F2 NO2F F
- Expected to be slow. It involves breaking an
F-F bond. - Step two NO2 F NO2F
- Expected to be fast. A fluorine atom is very
reactive.
93Reaction Mechanisms
- Since step one is slow, we can expect this step
to determine the overall rate of the reaction. - NO2 F2 NO2F F
- This would give a rate expression of
- rate k1 NO2 F2
- This agrees with the experimentally observed
results.
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95Catalysis
- Catalyst A substance that changes the rate of a
reaction without being consumed in the
reaction. - Provides an easier way to react.
- Lower activation energy.
- Still make the same products.
- Enzymes are biological catalysts.
- Inhibitor A substance that decreases the rate
of reaction.
96Catalysis
Types of catalysts Homogeneous - same
phase Catalyst is uniformly distributed
throughout the reaction mixture Example - I-
in peroxide. Heterogeneous - different
phase Catalyst is usually a solid and
the reactants are gases or liquids Example -
Automobile catalytic converter.
97End-of-Chapter 14 Exercises 9, 12, 13, 15, 17,
23, 24, 25, 27, 29, 31, 35, 36, 41, 42, 45, 47,
52, 57, 61, 62, 71, 77, 78, 96 Â