Title: KINETICS OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS
1KINETICS OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS
2Kinetics
- Rate of reaction
- Time dependency of a reaction
- relation between concentration and time
3Kinetics of a chemical reaction
- kf
- aA bB cC dD
- kb
- 6 unknowns, need to simplify
4- Ass
- If
- B gtgt A
- B not limiting
- kb ltlt kf
5- Apply in practice not theoretically true.
- Assumptions
- Backward reaction is negligible
- Other reaction species are not limiting
- Reaction conditions are constant pH, T, aw,
redox potential, concentration of other species - Therefore, k is a pseudo rate constant particular
for a given food system.
6Reaction order
- n 0 A Ao kt
- B Bo kt
- n 1 ln A/Ao - kt
- A Ao e-kt B Bo
ekt
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9Units are different, cannot compare.
10Half-life time for decrease in quality by
50 If n 1
11Order determination
- Method of differentiation
ln dA dt
slopen
lnA
12- 2. Method of integration
- Assume order n 0 or 1 or 2
- Integrate rate equation, plot equation
- Evaluate the fit of linear line
13 14Microbial growth
N number of microorganisms kG growth rate
constant
15G time for one doubling DG time for 1 log cycle
increase in number of microorganisms G is
determined from the log phase of growth
16- Accurate data ? accurate k ? need to measure over
50 change in reactant species. - but in foods 20-30 change is enough for quality
degradation, can use simple zero order kinetics - s std. dev.
- mean value.
17- Reaction order for some common reactions in foods
- n 0 enzymatic degradation, lipid oxidation, NEB
- n 1 microbial growth, rancidity
- n 2 vitamin C loss
- For shelf life study
- Need to determine
- Criteria to be measured
- Environmental conditions affect the reaction
rates - T, RH
18Temperature effect
- Activation energy
- Arrhenius relation
- ko Arrhenius equation constant
- Ea Activation energy (cal/mol) excess energy
barrier to over come - R universal gas constant (1.9872 cal/mol K)
- T absolute temperature, K
19- Important points
- Mode of deterioration changes with temperature
- Need to have more than two temperatures to obtain
reliable results - Â
- Activation energies for some degradation
reactions (kcal/mol) - Hydrolysis 10-20
- Lipid oxidation 15-25
- NEB 20-40
- Enzymatic or microbial degradation 50-150
20Temperature effect
- Q10 value
- measure of sensitivity to temperature
21- Q10
- 1.5-2 sensory quality loss in canned foods
- 1.5-3 rancidity
- 4-10 browning
- 20-40 quality loss for frozen fruits and
vegetables
22- Deviations from Arrhenius relation
- Â
- change in moisture
- change in physical state, phase change, ice or
glass formation - change in mode of deterioration with T
increase - partitioning of reactants between two phases,
such as concentration of reactants upon
freezing - temperature history effects
23- Tg considerations
- gt Tg rubbery state
- slope of Arrhenius plot changes, William, Landel
and Ferry (WLF) equation applies which
empirically models T dependence of mechanical and
dielectric relaxations with in the rubbery state.
24- In diffusioncontrolled systems
- where diffusion is free volume dependent, WLF
equation is needed to express reaction rate
constants as a function of T
25kref rate constant at Tref gt Tg C1, C2
system-dependent coefficients. C1 -17.44 C2
51.6 for Tref Tg for various polymers 10-100?C
above Tg viscosity-dependent changes in food
quality (crystallization, textural changes) fit
WLF model.
26- But chemical reactions may be kinetically and/or
diffusion limited. - Effective reaction rate constant k/(1k/?D)
- D Diffusion coefficient
- ? constant, independent of T
- k Arrhenius-type T dependence constant
- D follows Arrhenius equation with a change in
slope at Tg, or follows WLF equation in the
rubbery state and especially in the range
10-100?C above Tg, - k/?D defines relative influence of k and D.
- If k/?D lt 0.1 Arrhenius equation can be used for
modeling T dependency. - Slope changes in Arrhenius plot at Tg with either
constant slope above Tg or with a gradually
changing slope. - WLF equation is appropriate at 10-100?C above Tg.
- For complex food systems involving multiple
reaction steps and phases, either model can be
used for controlled-temperature functions like
sine, square wave T fluctuations to verify the
shelf life model.
27Variable temperature storage
- Zero order
- sum of losses (rate constant x time interval at
the average temperature Ti for a given time
period ?t).
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29Fraction of shelf life consumed
fr 1 - fc fr ts (1 - fc) ts remaining time
at temperature Ts
30Variable temperature storage
31Temperature effects
- Fluctuating temperatures
- sine wave
- square wave
32aw and temperature
- Clasius-Clapeyron equation describes temperature
dependence of aw
33BET equation
- Brunauer-Emmett-Teller equation
- Sorption isotherm moisture content vs aw
- can determine monolayer value (m1)
- valid for aw 0 - 0.5
34GAB equation
- valid for aw 0 - 0.9
- wider range than BET equation
- can determine monolayer value
- There are other sorption isotherm models
- Need to find which fits for food using
experimental data
35Moisture gain or loss
- Can estimate changes in moisture in packaged
foods - k/x permeability of the package
36Kinetics of enzymatic reactions
- Michaelis-Menten equation
- k1 k2
- E S ES E P
- k2
37Kinetics of enzymatic reactions
- Vmax Maximum velocity when enzyme is saturated
with substrate - Km Substrate concentration at half maximum
velocity, (k-1 k2) / k1
38Linear regression
- To estimate changes in a quality index with time
- Need to fit experimental data to equations and
calculate equation parameters - Can convert equations to linear form
- Use statistics for fitting data to equations
- accurate estimates of the parameters
39Linear regression
- Relation of a dependent variable y with an
independent variable x - y bo b1x
- bo , b1 parameters to estimate
- y a quality index
- x time
- Assumptions
- 1. Data are normally distributed
- 2. Constant variance
- 3. Independence of error
- 4. Linear relation
40Linear regression
Minimize sum of squares of error
41Linear regression
- More data more accurate prediction
- df degree of freedom, depend on number of data,
more data more df - lose 1 df to estimate 1 parameter
- confidence level (1-?) 90, 95, 99
42Linear regression
- t?/2 a test statistic, student t value at a
given confidence level - If n 3 df 1 t?/2 at 95 12.71
- If min n 8 df 6 t?/2 2.45
43Linear regression
- Confidence interval for a parameter estimate
- change in the parameter estimate
44Linear regression
- Correlation Coefficient (R2)
- Proportion of variability in y explained by the
linear relation - Total variability in y
- variability explained by linear relation
residuals - R2 lt 1
45Linear regression
- Strength of a linear relation
- 1. Small confidence intervals for parameter
estimates - 2. High Correlation Coefficient (R2) 1
- If R2 is small
- 1. no relation between x and y
- 2. relation not linear, use nonlinear equations