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Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12
46

Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Jan 03, 2016

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Page 1: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Chemical Kinetics

Chapter 12

Page 2: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Chemical Kinetics

The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Page 3: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Spontaneity

• tendency for a reaction to occur.

• does not mean that the reaction will be fast!

• Diamonds will spontaneously change into graphite, but the process is so slow that it is not detectable.

• What would be 2 ways to speed up a chemical reaction?

Page 4: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Reaction Mechanism

• the steps by which a chemical process occurs.

• allows us to find ways to facilitate reactions.

• can be changed by the use of a catalyst.

Page 5: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Reaction Rate

Change in concentration (conc) of a reactant or product per unit time.

Rate = conc of A at time conc of A at time 2 1

2 1

t tt t

At

Page 6: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Reaction Rate

It is customary to work with positive reaction rates, so a negative sign is used in some cases to make the rate positive.

Rates determined over a period of time are called average rates.

Instantaneous rate equals the negative slope of the tangent line.

Page 7: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

12_291

0.000370s

O2

0.0025

0.005

0.0075

0.0100

0.0006

70s

0.0026

110 s

NO2

NO

50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400

Con

cent

ratio

ns (

mol

/L)

Time (s)

[NO2 ]

t

The concentrations of nitrogen dioxide, nitric oxide, oxygen plotted versus time.

Page 8: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

12_1575

Time Time

(a) (b) (c)

Representation of the reaction of 2 NO2(g) ---> 2 NO(g) + O2(g).

a) t = 0 b) & c) with increased time, NO2 is changed intoNO and O2.

Page 9: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Rate Laws(differential)

Rate = k[NO2]n

k = rate constant

n = rate order

Page 10: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Types of Rate Laws

Differential Rate Law: expresses how rate depends on concentration.

Integrated Rate Law: expresses how concentration depends on time.

Page 11: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Rate Laws Summary• Differential rate law -- rate of a reaction depends

on concentration.• Integrated rate law -- concentration depends on

time.• Rate laws normally only involve concentrations

of reactants.• Experimental determination of either rate law is

sufficient.• Experimental convenience dictates which rate

law is determined experimentally.• Rate law for a reaction often indicates reaction

mechanism.

Page 12: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

12_292

.20

.40

.60

.80

1.00

400 800 1200 1600 2000

Rate = 5.4 x 10-4 mol/L.s

Rate = 2.7 x 10-4 mol/L.s[N

2O5]

(mol

/L)

Time (s)

Plot of the concentration of N2O5 as a function of time for thereaction 2N2O5(soln) → 4NO2(soln) + O2(g). Rate at 0.90 M is twice the rate at 0.45 M.

Page 13: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Method of Initial Rates

Initial Rate: the “instantaneous rate” just after the reaction begins.

The initial rate is determined in several experiments using different initial concentrations.

See Sample Exercise 12.1 on pages 570-571.

Page 14: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Overall Reaction Order

Sum of the order of each component in the rate law.

rate = k[H2SeO3][H+]2[I]3

The overall reaction order is 1 + 2 + 3 = 6.

Page 15: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

First-Order Rate Law

Integrated first-order rate law is

ln[A] = kt + ln[A]o

y = mx + b

If a reaction is first-order, a plot of ln[A] versus time is a straight line.

Rate = A

A

t

k

For For aaA A Products in a 1st-order reaction, Products in a 1st-order reaction,

Page 16: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Half-Life of a First-Order Reaction

t1/2 = half-life of the reaction

k = rate constant

For a first-order reaction, the half-life does not depend on concentration.

tk1/2

0 693.

Page 17: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

12_294

[N2O5]0 0.1000

0.0100

0.0200

0.0300

0.0400

0.0500

0.0600

0.0700

0.0800

0.0900

[N2O5]02

[N2O5]04

[N2O5]08

50 150 250 350100 200 300 400

t1/2 t1/2 t1/2

Time (s)

[N2O

5](m

ol/L

)

Plot of [N2O5] versus time for the decomposition reaction of N2O5. Note that the half-life for a 1st order reaction isconstant.

Page 18: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Second-Order Rate Law

For aA products in a second-order reaction,

Integrated rate law is

Rate = A

A

t

k 2

1

A +

1

A o

kt

y = mx + bIf a reaction is second-order, a plot of 1/[A]

versus time is a straight line.

Page 19: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Half-Life of a Second-Order Reaction

t1/2 = half-life of the reaction

k = rate constant

Ao = initial concentration of A

The half-life is dependent upon the initial concentration.

tk1/2

oA

1

Page 20: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Zero-Order Rate LawFor aA---> products in zero-order reaction,

Rate = k[A]o = k

The integrated rate law is

[A] = -kt + [A]0

y = mx + b

If a reaction is zero-order, the plot of [A] versus time is a straight line.

Example -- surface of a solid catalyst cannot hold a greater concentration of reactant.

Page 21: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

12_06T

Table 12.6 Summary of the Kinetics for Reactions of the Type aA Products That AreZero, First, or Second Order in [A]

Order

Zero First Second

Rate law Rate = k Rate = k[A] Rate = k[A]2

Integrated rate law [A] = -kt + [A]0 ln[A] = -kt + ln[A]0 [A]1

= kt + [A]0

1

Plot needed to give a straight line [A] versus t ln[A] versus t [A]1

versus t

Relationship of rate constantSlope = -k Slope = -k Slope = kto the slope of straight line

Half-life

2kt1/2 =

[A]0k

t1/2 =0.693

k[A]0t1/2 =

1

KNOW THIS TABLE!!!!

Page 22: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Rate Law Analogy

v = 8 l o Rate = k[A]0 = k Zero order

v = vertices of cube

P = 12 l 1 Rate = k[A]1 First order

P = sum of lengths of edges of cube

A = 6 l 2 Rate = k[A]2 Second order

A= total surface area of cube

V = 1 l 3 Rate = k[A]3 Third order

V = volume of cube

Page 23: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

A Summary

1. Simplification: Conditions are set such that only forward reaction is important.

2. Two types: differential rate law integrated rate law

3. Which type? Depends on the type of data collected - differential and integrated forms can be interconverted.

Page 24: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

A Summary (continued)

4. Most common: method of initial rates.

5. Concentration v. time: used to determine integrated rate law, often graphically.

6. For several reactants: choose conditions under which only one reactant varies significantly (pseudo first-order conditions).

Page 25: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Reaction 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.

Page 26: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Reaction Mechanism (continued)

The reaction

has many steps in the reaction mechanism.

6CO 6H O C H O O2 2light

6 12 6 2 6

Page 27: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Often Used Terms

Intermediate: formed in one step and used up in a subsequent step and so is never seen as a product.

Molecularity: the number of species that must collide to produce the reaction indicated by that step.

Elementary Step: A reaction whose rate law can be written from its molecularity.

uni, bi and termolecular

Page 28: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.
Page 29: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Reaction Mechanism Requirements

1. The sum of the elementary steps must give the overall balanced equation for the reaction.

2. The mechanism must agree with the experimentally determined rate law.

Page 30: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Rate-Determining Step

In a multistep reaction, it is the slowest step. It therefore determines the rate of reaction.

Page 31: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Fast Equilibrium Reaction

When the 1st step is not the slow step, but a fast equilibrium, the rate can be determined as follows:

2A + B → C 2nd order in B, 1st order in A.

Step 1 A + B ↔ D (Fast equilibrium)

Step 2 D + B → E Slow

Step 3 E + A → C + B Fast

A + B ↔ D

D + B → E

E + A → C + B

2 A + B → C

1st requirement that elementary stepsequal overall reaction is met.

Page 32: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Fast Equilibrium Reaction(continued)

kf[A][B] = kr[D] (fast)

[D] = ([A][B])

Rate = k2[D][B] (slow)

Substitute fast equation in terms of [D] into slow reaction.

Rate = ([A][B][B])

Rate = k[A][B]2

2nd requirement is also met, this is, then, a possible mechanism.

f

r

k

k

2 f

r

k k

k

Page 33: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Collision Model

Key Idea: Molecules must collide to react.

However, only a small fraction of collisions produces a reaction. Why?

Arrhenius: An activation energy must be overcome.

Page 34: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

a) The change in potential energy as a function of reaction progress.Ea is the activation energy and E is the net energy change --exothermic. b) Molecular representation of the reaction.

Page 35: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Three possible collision orientations-- a) & b) produce reactions,while c) does not.

Page 36: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Activation Energy, Ea

Activation energy for a given reaction is a constant and not temperature dependent.

The rate constant (k) is temperature dependent.

Page 37: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Arrhenius Equation

- Collisions must have enough energy to produce the reaction (must equal or exceed the activation energy).

- Orientation of reactants must allow formation of new bonds.

Page 38: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

12_300

T1

T2

00

EaEnergy

T2 > T1

Plot showing the number of collisions with a particular energy at T1& T2, where T2 > T1 -- Boltzman Distribution.

Page 39: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Arrhenius Equation (continued)

k = rate constant

A = frequency factor

Ea = activation energy

T = temperature

R = gas constant

k Ae E RT a /

Page 40: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Arrhenius Equation

If the natural logarithm of each side of the Arrhenius Equation is taken, the following equation results:

ln(k) = + ln(A)y = mx + b

m = when ln(k) is plotted versus .

See Sample Exercise 12.7.

a-E

R

a-E

R

1

T

1

T

Page 41: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

CatalysisCatalyst: A substance that speeds up a reaction without being consumed

Enzyme: A large molecule (usually a protein) that catalyzes biological reactions.

Homogeneous catalyst: Present in the same phase as the reacting molecules.

Heterogeneous catalyst: Present in a different phase than the reacting molecules.

Page 42: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

12_303

E

Reactants

Products

Catalyzedpathway

Uncatalyzedpathway

Reaction progress

Ene

rgy

Energy plots for a catalyzed and an uncatalyzed pathway for an endothermic reaction.

Page 43: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

12_304

Ea (uncatalyzed )

Effectivecollisions(uncatalyzed)

Effectivecollisions(catalyzed)

Ea (catalyzed )

(a) (b)

Nu

mbe

r of

col

lisio

nsw

ith a

giv

en e

nerg

y

Nu

mbe

r of

col

lisio

nsw

ith a

giv

en e

nerg

y

Energy Energy

Effect of a catalyst on the number of reaction-producingcollisions. A greater fraction of collisions are effective for the catalyzed reaction.

Page 44: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Heterogeneous Catalysis

1. Adsorption and activation of the reactants.

2. Migration of the adsorbed reactants on the surface.

3. Reaction of the adsorbed substances.

4. Escape, or desorption, of the products.

Steps:Steps:

Page 45: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Homogeneous Catalysis

Catalyst is in the same phase as the reacting molecules.

NO(g) + O2(g) → NO2(g)

NO2(g) → NO(g) + O(g)

O2(g) + O(g) → O3(g)

O2(g) → O3(g)

What is the catalyst in this reaction?

What are the intermediates?

3

2

1

2

NO

NO2 & O

Page 46: Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12. Chemical Kinetics The area of chemistry that concerns reaction rates.

Final Notes on Kinetics

• As T increases, so does k.

• Ea & E are independent of T.

• A catalyst lowers Ea and increases the rate of both kf & kr.