Title: Chemical kinetics
1Chemical kinetics
The rate of a chemical reaction is dependent on
- reactant concentrations
- state of reactants (solid, liquid, powder, etc.)
- temperature (e.g., eggs cook faster at higher
temperatures) - catalyst (e.g., catalytic converter in your car
speeds the formation of less polluting products
from your engine)
Kinetics predicts on how fast you reach
equilibrium... not the extent to which the
reaction proceeds!
?
2Reaction rates are determined experimentally
NOTE Rate varies with time
?
3Average Reaction Rate
4Relative Rates
5Example
- The reaction of hydrogen with nitrogen to produce
ammonia is 3H2 N2 ?? 2NH3 - If the rate of appearance of NH3 is 3.0 x 10-6
M/s, what is the rate of disappearance of H2?
6Write relative rate expressions for the following
reactions in terms of the disappearance of the
reactants and the appearance of the products
- 3O2(g) ? 2O3(g)
- 4NH3(g) 5O2(g) ? 4NO(g) 6H2O(g)
7Types of Rate Laws
- Differential Rate Law expresses how rate
depends on concentration. - Integrated Rate Law expresses how concentration
depends on time.
8Differential Rate Law
- This rate law shows how the rate of a reaction
depends on concentrations of various species in
the reaction.
A and B are reactants
The Rate Law is determined experimentally does
not necessarily reflect the stoichiometry of the
reaction
?
9How does value of k affect reaction rate?
?
10Rate Law Example
- The reaction2NO(g) 2H2(g) ? N2(g)
2H2O(g)has the rate law R k NO2 H2 - Therefore the reaction is 2nd order in NO, 1st
order in H2 and 3rd order overall.
11Rate Constant Units
- The units for the rate constant depend on the
rate law. - For example, if the rate law is R k NO2
Br2then the units are - R ? M sec-1
- therefore, k ?
12Measured Reaction Rates
- The rate of reaction changes with time, as the
concentrations of reactants and products change. - The rate constant, but not the rate, is
independent of time. - The initial rate is the reaction rate measured
before the initial concentrations have had time
to change.
13Determining Reaction Orders
- The rate law for a given reaction must be
determined experimentally. This means
determining the order with respect to each
species involved. - The two major methods are
- Method of Initial Rates
- Integrated Rate Law Method
14Method of Initial Rates
15Method of Initial Rates
- .involves measuring the rate of reaction at very
short times before any significant changes in
concentration occur
16The initial rate is determined in several
experiments using different initial
concentrations.
e.g.
BrO3- 5Br- 6H3O ? 3Br2 _ 9H2O
initial concentrations in starting solution
Expt BrO3- Br- H3O Initial rate (M/s)
1 0.10 0.10 0.10 1.2x10-3
2 0.20 0.10 0.10 2.4x10-3
3 0.10 0.30 0.10 3.5x10-3
4 0.20 0.10 0.15 5.5x10-3
?
17How to use the initial rate data
Note k does not change
?
18return to problem...
Expt BrO3- Br- H3O Initial rate (M/s)
1 0.10 0.10 0.10 1.2x10-3
2 0.20 0.10 0.10 2.4x10-3
3 0.10 0.30 0.10 3.5x10-3
4 0.20 0.10 0.15 5.5x10-3
BrO3-
Find expt pair where only ONE conc changes
Find similar pair of expts for other reactants
Br-
H3O
RatekBrO3- Br- H3O2
?
19Integrated Rate Laws
20First-Order Rate Law
- For aA ? products in a second-order reaction,
21Can we predict concentration with time?
We will consider only first order reaction...
Rate kA
A?B
?
22Example problem radioactive decay (a first
order process)
14C has a half-life of 5,730 years. If the
concentration of 14C originally in an artifact
was 1.3x10-9 moles/g and the current
concentration is 0.87x10-9 moles/g,. How old is
the artifact?
?
23Recognizing First-Order
- Plot the experimental ln A vs. time
- If the graph is linear, the reaction is
first-order. - The rate constant is k -slope
ln A - kt ln A0
y m t b
24SO2Cl Example
- The reaction SO2Cl2(g) ? SO2(g) Cl2(g) gives
the following experimental data
Time (s) Pressure SO2Cl2 (atm)
0 1.000
2,500 0.947
5,000 0.895
7,500 0.848
10,000 0.803
25SO2Cl Example
ln P vs time
slope 2.19 x 10-5 sec-1
ln(p/atm)
time/sec
26Second-Order Rate Law
- For aA ? products in a second-order reaction,
27Second-Order Rate Law (Type I)
k
2A ? P
28Recognizing Second-Order
- Plot the experimental 1/A vs. time
- If the graph is linear, the reaction is
second-order. - The rate constant is k slope
y m t b
29NO2 Example
- The following data were obtained for the
gas-phase decomposition of NO2(g) at 300C.
Time (s) NO2 ln NO2 1/NO2
0 0.01000 -4.610 100
50 0.00787 -4.845 127
100 0.00649 -5.038 154
200 0.00481 -5.337 208
300 0.00380 -5.573 263
30First Order Plot
ln NO2
time / s
31Second Order Plot
1/ NO2
time / s
32Zero Order Rate Law
- Reaction rate is does not depend on concentration
- Rate k
- Plot of A vs. time produces straight line
-
-
33Zero Order Rate Law
34Reaction Mechanisms
35Reaction Mechanism
- The series of steps by which a chemical reaction
occurs. - A chemical equation does not tell us how
reactants become products - it is a summary of
the overall process.
36Reaction Mechanism
- The mechanism of a reaction is the sequence of
individual collisions, known as elementary steps,
that take the reactant molecule(s) to the product
molecule(s).
37Often Used Terms
- Elementary Step A reaction whose rate law can
be written from its chemical equation.
38Often Used Terms
- Intermediate formed in one step and used up in
a subsequent step and so is never seen as a
product.
39Often Used Terms
- Molecularity the number of species that must
collide to produce the reaction indicated by that
step.
40Ozone Example
- The conversion of ozone O3 to oxygen O2 has the
overall balanced equation - 2O3(g) ? 3O2(g).
- A possible mechanism for this reaction has two
elementary steps - O3(g) ? O(g) O2(g)
- O3(g) O(g) ? 2O2(g)
- Net result 2O3(g) ? 3O2(g)
- O(g) is an intermediate
41Reaction Mechanisms
- Criteria
- Elementary steps must add to give overall
balanced equation - Rate law of slow step must agree with actual rate
law
42Rate Determining Steps
- Some reactions have a mechanism in which one of
the elementary steps is much slower than the
others. - Such a slow elementary step is called the rate
determining step, since it acts as the bottleneck
for the overall reaction. - The overall rate law is then simply the rate law
for the rate determining step.
43Schematic of rate of reaction for2NO O2 ? 2NO2
?
44When the slow step isnt the first
stepintermediates in the rate law
- Step 1 NO NO ? N2O2
- Step 2 N2O2 O2?2NO2 (slow)
45Collision Model
- Molecules must collide with sufficient energy to
react. - only a small fraction of collisions produces a
reaction. - Arrhenius An activation energy, Ea, must be
overcome.
46EFFECT OF TEMPERATURE ON REACTION
KINETICSMinimum energy needed for effective
collision, i.e., product formed
no reaction
Products
?
47Temperature dependence of the number of molecules
that have the minimum energy to react.
Activation energy
At higher temperatures, more molecules have the
minimum energy and the rate of reaction increases.
?
48Activation Energy and rate of reaction
?
49Arrhenius Equation
- Collisions must have enough energy to produce the
reaction (must equal or exceed the activation
energy Ea). - Orientation of reactants must allow formation of
new bonds. (frequency factor, A)
50The frequency factor (A) can be visualized as a
geometry factor. Not all collisions (even with
enough energy) will result in a successful
reaction. What if it hits in the wrong spot?
51Lets deal with this concept quantitativelyArrhe
nius equation
k rate constant Ea activation energy A
frequency factor R 8.314 J/mol-K
Useful form of equation for comparing rates when
temperature is changed (Ea stays the same)
?
52How much faster is a reaction if the temperature
is raised from 25 to 35oC when Ea 58.1 kJ/mol?
53Arrhenius Equation
Therefore, ln k vs. 1/T is linear with slope Ea/R
54CH3NC Example
- The table below shows the rate constant for the
CH3NC rearrangement at various temperatures.
Find the activation energy.
Temperature / C k / s-1
189.7 2.52 x 10-5
198.9 5.25 x 10-5
230.3 6.30 x 10-4
251.2 3.16 x 10-3
55Slope -Ea/R -19050 -Ea/8.3145 J/Kmol Ea
158391 J 158.391 kJ
56Catalysis
- Catalyst A substance that speeds up a reaction
without being consumed - Enzyme A large molecule (usually a protein)
that catalyzes biological reactions.
57Catalysts increase reaction rate
- Catalysts change the reaction mechanism to lower
Ea - Catalysts are involved in reaction but are
neither created nor consumed - Homogeneous catalyst Same phase as reactants
(e.g., a soluble solution species) - Heterogeneous catalyst Separate phase from
reactants(e.g., catalytic muffler on your
automobile)
58Catalysis
- Homogeneous catalyst Present in the same phase
as the reacting molecules. - Heterogeneous catalyst Present in a different
phase than the reacting molecules.
59Heterogeneous Catalysis
Steps
- 1. Adsorption and activation of the reactants.
- 2. Migration of the adsorbed reactants on the
surface.
60Heterogeneous Catalysis
Steps
- 3. Reaction of the adsorbed substances.
- 4. Escape, or desorption, of the products.
61Example of Heterogeneous catalysis
C2H4 H2 ? C2H6
Catalytic converter
C2H5? (radical)
?