Chemical-Kinetics Class 12
Chemical-Kinetics Class 12
DHANKHAR
• The branch of chemistry, which deals with the
study of reaction rates and their mechanisms,
called chemical kinetics.
• Thermodynamics tells only about the feasibility
of a reaction whereas chemical kinetics tells
about the rate of a reaction.
• For example, thermodynamic data indicate that
diamond shall convert to graphite but in reality
the conversion rate is so slow that the change is
not perceptible at all.
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• Kinetic studies not only help us to determine
the speed or rate of a chemical reaction but
also describe the conditions by which the
reaction rates can be altered.
• The factors such as concentration,
temperature, pressure and catalyst affect the
rate of a reaction.
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• The speed of a reaction or the rate of a
reaction can be defined as the change in
concentration of a reactant or product in unit
time. It can be expressed in terms of:
• (i) the rate of decrease in concentration of
any one of the reactants, or
• (ii) the rate of increase in concentration of
any one of the products.
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Consider a hypothetical reaction, assuming that the volume of
the system remains constant
R→P
One mole of the reactant R produces one mole of the product
P. If [R]1 and [P]1 are the concentrations of R and respectively
at time t1and [R]2 and [P]2 are their concentrations at time t2
then,
Δt = t2 – t1
The square brackets in the above expressions are used to express molar
concentration.
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• Rate of disappearance of R
= Decrease in concentration of R = − Δ [R]
Time taken Δt
Rate of appearance of P
= Increase in concentration of P = + Δ [P]
Time taken Δt
Δ[Fe2+] 0.0010 M
Rate of formation of Fe2+= = = 2.6x10-5 M s-
Δt 38.5 s
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2 Fe3+(aq) + Sn2+ → 2 Fe2+(aq) + Sn4+(aq)
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aA+bB→cC+dD
Rate of reaction = rate of disappearance of reactants
1 Δ[A] 1 Δ[B]
=- =-
a Δt b Δt Eqn.1
1 Δ[C] 1 Δ[D]
= = Eqn.2
c Δt d Δt
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• Mathematically for an infinitesimally small time
interval, dt, instantaneous rate is given by –
• rav = −Δ[R ] = Δ[P ]
Δt Δt
As Δt → 0 or
-Δ[H2O2]
Rate =
-(-2.32 M / 1360 s) = 1.7 x 10-3 M s-1
Δt
-(-1.7 M / 2600 s) =
6 x 10-4 M s-1
Initial rate ,Average rate over a time period. Instantaneous rate – slope of tangent
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lin.
Factors affecting the Rate of a Chemical
Reaction
1-Nature of reactant : Ionic substance react much faster than
covalent substances.
2-Concencentration of Reactants
: Rate of reaction is directly
proportional to conc. of reactants
(partial pressure in case of gaseous
- phase reactions).
3-Temperature : Rate of reaction increases with increase
in temperature.
4-Presence of Catalyst : A catalyst alters the Rate of a reaction.
5-Surface Area of the Reactants:
Rate of rean. ∝ surface area.
6- Radiations
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Rate Law or Rate Expression and Rate
Constant
• The expression which relates of rate of
reaction to concentration of the reactants is
known as rate law. It is also called as rate
equation or rate expression.
• Consider a general reaction
aA + bB → cC + dD
• where a, b, c and d are the stoichiometric
coefficients of reactants and products.
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Rate Law or Rate Expression and Rate
Constant
• The rate expression for this reaction is -
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Rate Law or Rate Expression and Rate Constant
Rate of reaction = k
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• The sum of powers of the concentration of the
reactants in the rate law expression is called the
order of that chemical reaction.
• For a general reaction
aA + bB → cC + dD
Let Rate of reaction = k [A]x[B]y
Here ,
x = order of reaction w.r.t. A
y = order of reaction w.r.t. B
Overall order of reaction(n) = x + y
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Examples of observed rate laws for some reactions follow.
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Order of a reaction can be 0, 1, 2, 3 and even a
fraction.
Depending upon order of reaction, reactions are
termed as zero, first or second order reactions.
A zero order reaction means that the rate of
reaction is independent of the concentration of
reactants.
Order of reaction cannot be predicted by merely
looking at the balanced chemical equation, i.e.,
theoretically but must be determined
experimentally.
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For a nth order reaction- A → Product
Rate = k [A]n
a
Rate concentration 1
k = = x
[A]n time (concentration)n
k = (concentration)1-n time-1
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Practice Problems
1.
2.
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Molecularity of a Reaction
Q.Why the reactions having molecularity
greater than three is rare ?
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Molecularity of a Reaction
Molecularity in case of complex reactions?
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Molecularity vs. Order
Molecularity of Reaction Order of Reaction
It is the number of atoms, ions or It is the sum of the power of
molecules that must collide with one concentration terms on which the rate
another simultaneously so as to of reaction actually depends or it is
result into a chemical the sum of powers of the
reaction. concentration terms in the rate law
equation.
Molecularity of reaction Order of reaction can be zero.
Cannot be zero.
It is a theoretical concept. It is determined experimentally.
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Integrated Rate Equations
[R] ̶ [Ro] = ̶ kt
Or
[Ro ] ̶ [R] = kt
Or
[Ro ] ̶ [R]
k=
𝐭
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Integrated Rate Equations
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Integrated Rate Equations
First Order Reactions
First order reaction means that the rate of the reaction is
proportional to first power of the concentration of reactants.
Consider the reaction,
R→P
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Integrated Rate Equations
Integrating both sides between proper limits
𝐭
𝐑
𝐝[𝐑]
= −𝐤 𝐝𝐭
𝐑𝟎 𝐑
𝟎
ln[R] ̶ ln [Ro] = ̶ kt
Or
ln [Ro ] ̶ ln[R] = kt
Or
[Ro]
kt = ln
[R]
𝟏 [Ro]
Or k = ln [R]
𝐭
𝟐.𝟑𝟎𝟑 [Ro]
Ork= log10
𝐭 [R]
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Integrated Rate Equations
𝟐.𝟑𝟎𝟑 [Ro]
k= log10 [R]
𝐭
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Integrated Rate Equations
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Half-Life of a Reaction
The half-life of a reaction is the time in which the
concentration of a reactant is reduced to one half of its initial
concentration. It is represented as t1/2
t1/2 for a Zero Order Reactions
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Half-Life of a Reaction
t1/2 for a First Order Reactions
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Half-Life of a Reaction
Practice Problems
1. A first order reaction takes 40 minutes for 30 %
completion . calculate its t1/2 value. (2008,13)
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Pseudo - first order reaction
Reactions which are not truly of the first order but under certain
conditions reactions become that of first order are called
pseudo unimolecular reaction.
For example: Hydrolysis of ester in presence of acid
CH3COOC2H5 + H2O CH3COOH + C2H5OH
From this reaction, the rate expression should be
r = k [ester] [H2O]
Since, hydrolysis takes place in the excess of H2O and
concentration change of H2O is negligible practically.
therefore, r = k’ [ester]
Where k’ = k[H2O].
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Methods of determining the order of a reaction
Integrated method
The equation which gives a constant value of k decides the order
of reaction
Graphical method
The data are plotted acc to different integrated rate equations
so as to yield a straight line .Slope gives the value of rate
constant
Initial rate method
Concentration of one of the reactant is varied
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Graphical Representation
dx dx dx
dt dt dt
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Graphical Representation
t t t
zero order first order second order
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Initial rate method
• This method involves the determination of the order
of each reactant separately.
m
m
r1 [A1] [B] n
r1 [A1]
= m n
; =
r2 [A2 ] [B] r2 [A2 ]
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Illustrative Example
Rate of the reaction; A + B = products; is given below as a
function of the initial concentration of ‘A’ and ‘B’.
[A](mol L-1) [B](mol L-1) rate(mol L-1min-1)
0.01 0.01 0.005
0.02 0.01 0.010
0.01 0.02 0.005
Determine the order of the reaction with respect to ‘A’ and ‘B’.
Solution:
1
t1 / 2
[A] 0n 1
a a 1/a
zero order first order second order
Graphical representation for half lives versus concentration
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Illustrative Example
The half-life of a particular chemical reaction at two different
initial concentrations 5 x 10-4 and 25 x10-5 M are 2 and 16 hours.
Calculate the order of reaction.
Solution:
n1
A 0
(t1 / 2 )2 1
(t1 / 2 )1
A 0
2
n1
16 5 104
(2)n1
2 5
25 10
8 = (2)n-1
n - 1 =3
n =4 48
Integrated method
The order of the reaction is that one for which the value
of rate constant is constant.
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Some first order reactions
Decomposition of H2O2
1
H2O2 H2O O2
2
V a
Vt a x
2.303 Vo
k log
t Vt
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Some first order reactions
Hydrolysis of ester
H
CH3COOC2H5 H2O CH3COOH C2H5OH
a 0 0
ax x x
0 a a
Let V0 , Vt V be the volume of alkali required for titration
during 0 ,t & infinite time
VO HCl
Vt HCl x
V HCl a
V Vt a x 2.303 V Vo
k log
V a t V Vt
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Theories of chemical kinetics
1. Collision theory
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Collision theory
Reaction occurs when reacting species have sufficient energy
to collide and proper orientation in space.
Energy barrier:
The minimum energy which the colliding particles possess in
order to bring about the chemical reaction is called threshold
energy
The energy difference between threshold energy & average
energy of reacting molecules is called activation energy
Orientation barrier:
Colliding molecules should be in their proper orientation at
the time of collision.
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Transition State Theory
In the activated complex theory, we consider two reactants
approaching and their potential energy rising and reaching a
maximum.
H Ea Ea`
1. Ea is always positive.
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Effect of temperature on rate of chemical reaction
k(T+10)
The ratio kT is called the temperature
coefficient and its value is 2 or 3
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Effect of temperature on rate of chemical reaction
Arrhenius equation
or
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Effect of temperature on rate of chemical reaction
At temperature T1 Eqn.1
At temperature T2 Eqn.2
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Effect of temperature on rate of chemical reaction
-Ea/RT
k = A.e
k2 Ea 1 1
or log = -
k1 2.303 R T1 T2
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Illustrative Example
Ea 320 - 300
log4 =
2.303×1.987 300×320
0.60205×2.303×1.987×300×320
Ea =
20
= 13222.98 cals
Ea = 13.311 K cals 61
Illustrative Example
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Catalysis
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How catalyst change reaction rate
• Catalysts are
the one way to
lower the
energy of
activation
for a particular
reaction by
altering the
path of the
reaction.
• The lower
activation
energy allows
the reaction to
proceed
faster.
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Rate Law and Mechanism
A mechanism is a collection of elementary steps devised to
explain the reaction in view of the observed rate law.
For the reaction, 2 NO2 (g) + F2 (g) 2 NO2F (g), the rate
law is,
rate = k [NO2] [F2] .
Can the elementary reaction be the same as the overall
reaction?
If they were the same the rate law would have been
rate = k [NO2]2 [F2],
Therefore, the overall reaction is not an elementary
reaction.
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Rate-determining Step in a Mechanism
Slowest step:
The rate determining step is the slowest elementary step
in a mechanism, and the rate law for this step is the rate
law for the overall reaction.
Steady-state approximation:
The steady-state approximation is a general method for
deriving rate laws when the relative speed cannot be
identified. It is based on the assumption that the
concentration of the intermediate is constant.
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Illustrative Problem
A B AB (fast)
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Solution
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Illustrative Problem
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Solution
0.693
k380 = =1.925×10-3 min-1
360
k 450 200×103 1 1
log = -
k380 2.303×8.314 653 723
k 450
log =1.55 k 450 = 6.83×10-2
1.925×10-3
0.693
t 1 at 450°C = =10.15 min
2
6.83×10-2
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