Chapter 2 Students Version
Chapter 2 Students Version
CHEMICAL
KINETICS
1
Chemical Kinetics
The speed of a chemical reaction is called
its reaction rate
The rate of a reaction is a measure of how
fast the reaction makes products, or how
fast the reactants are consumed.
Chemical kinetics is the study of the
factors that affect the rates of chemical
reactions
Such as temperature, reactant concentrations
Rate = [concentration]
time
Rate = [products] = - [reactants]
time
time
bB
cC
dD
1 d A
1 d B 1 d C 1 d D
Rate
a dt
b dt
c dt
d dt
Reactants (decrease)
Products (increase)
H2O2
(aq)
2H2O(g)
(a) Express the rate in terms of changes in [H2], [O2], and [H2O] with
time.
(b) When [O2] is decreasing at 0.23 mol/L*s, at what rate is [H2O]
increasing?
SOLUTION:
(a) rate =
(b)
[O2]
[H2]
= -
[O2]
= - 0.23 mol/L*s
=+
t
[H2O]
=+ 1
2
[H2O]
[H2O]
t
= 0.46 mol/L*s
t
7
at t = 0
[A] = 8
[B] = 8
[C] = 0
at t = 16
[A] = 4
[B] = 4
[C] = 4
A 2 A 1
Rate
t 2 t1
t
4 8
Rate
0.25
16 0
C C 2 C 1
Rate
t 2 t1
t
4 0
Rate
0.25
16 0
10
at t
[X]
[Y]
[Z]
=
=
=
=
0
8
8
0
at t = 16
[X] = 7
[Y] = 7
[Z] = 1
X
X 2 X 1
Rate
t 2 t1
t
7 8
Rate
0.0625
16 0
Z Z 2 Z 1
Rate
t 2 t1
t
Rate
1 0
16 0
0.0625
11
Average Rate
Change in measured concentrations in any
particular time period
linear approximation of a curve
12
average rate in a
given time period =
slope of the line
connecting the [H2]
points; and +slope
of the line for [HI]
Instantaneous Rate
The instantaneous rate is the change in
concentration at any one particular time
Determined by taking the slope of a line
tangent to the concentartion vs time curve at
any particular point.
15
2 NO2 2 NO O2
[ NO2 ]
Average Rate
t
d [ NO2 ]
Instantaneous Rate= dt
C4H9Cl
(aq)
+ H2O
(l)
C4H9OH
(aq)
+ HCl
(aq)
-[C4H9Cl]
t
= [C H OH]
4 9
t
17
H2(g) + I2(g)
2HI
(g)
What if the ratio is NOT1:1?
[HI] increases twice as fast
as [H2] decreases.
Rate = -
[H2]
t
=-
[I2]
t
[HI]
1
=
t
2
[HI]
[H2]
[I2]
Rate =
= -2
= -2
t
t
t
The expression for the rate of a
reaction and its numerical value
depend on which substance serves as
the reference.
18
Rate = k [A]n
m
[B]
19
Rate Laws
Rate laws are always determined
experimentally.
Reaction order is always defined in terms of
reactant (not product) concentrations.
The order of a reactant is not related to the
stoichiometric coefficient of the reactant in the
balanced chemical equation.
F2 (g) + 2ClO2 (g)
2FClO2 (g)
rate = k [F2][ClO2] 1
20
Reaction Order
The exponent on each reactant in the
rate law is called the order with
respect to that reactant
The sum of the exponents on the
reactants is called the overall order
2 NO(g) + O2(g) 2 NO2(g)
of the reaction
2
1
is: rate
Rate =
k[NO]
[O
]
The
law for the
reaction given:
2
The reaction is:
second order with respect to [NO],
first order with respect to [O2],
and third order overall.
22
R k[ A] [ B ]
[ A]
A is an inhibitor
(decreases the
rate)
23
Units of k (t in
seconds)
mol/L*s (or mol L-1 s1
)
1/s (or s1
)
L/mol*s (or L mol -1 s1
)
L2 / mol2 *s (or L2 mol-2 s1
)
24
2NO2(g)
rate = k[NO]2[O2]
2nd order in NO
1st order in O2
I3-(aq) +
rate = k[H2O2][I-]
1st order in H2O2
2nd order overall
1st order in I0 order in H+
25
26
27
29
31
2FClO2 (g)
rate = k [F2]x[ClO2]y
rate = k [F2]1[ClO2]1
32
33
34
Rate Equations
The relationship between reactant concentration
and reaction rate is expressed by an equation called
a rate equation or rate law.
Br2
(aq) + HCOOH
(aq)
2Br-
+
+
2H
(aq)
(aq) +
CO2
(g)
Rate Constant
Br2
(aq) + HCOOH
(aq)
2Br-
+
+
2H
(aq)
(aq) +
CO2
(g)
37
Rate Constant
Br2
(aq) +
HCOOH
(aq)
2Br-
(aq) +
2H+
(aq) +
CO2
(g)
rate [Br2]
rate = k [Br2]
rate
k=
[Br2]
k = rate
constant
= 3.50 x 10-3 s-1
Knowing the k allow you to calculate the rate at a particular
concentration. The units of k depends on the rate law or order of
reaction for a particular reaction- next slide will discussed further.
38
when
0 order = Ms
1st order = s-1
2nd order = M-1 s-1
39
(g)
+ Br2
(g)
2 NOBr
(g)
40
Determine the rate law and rate constant for the reaction
NO2(g) + CO(g) NO(g) + CO2(g)
1. Find value of n
Rate exp 4
:
Rate exp 2
k 0.40 0.10
0.033
n
m
0.0082
k 0.20 0.10
n
2n 4
n2
2. Find value of m
Rate exp 3
:
Rate exp 2
k 0.20 0.20
0.0083
n
m
0.0082
k 0.20 0.10
n
2m 1
m0
3. Rate k NO 2
k NO 2
CO m
0.0021 k 0.10
k 0.21 M -1s 1
2
41
42
0.1
0.1
0.1
8.0 x 10-4
0.2
0.1
0.1
1.6 x 10-3
0.2
0.2
0.1
3.2 x 10-3
0.1
0.1
0.2
3.2 x 10-3
44
45
y
[A]initial
[A]t =
-mx
kt + [A]0
slo
p
[A]
time
+ b
e=
47
ln [A]t =
[A]0
-mx
+ b
kt + ln
ln[A]initial
ln[A]
time
49
50
mx
+ b
1
1
= kt +
[A]t
[A]
0
1
[A]
p
o
l
s
k
=
e
1
[A]0
time
51
52
3.
Half-Life
The half-life, t1/2, of a reaction is
the time it takes for the
concentration of the reactant to fall
to its initial value
The half-life of the reaction depends
on the order of the reaction
53
[A]t kt [A]0
Zero-order reactions
At time t = 0, [A] = [A]0
And when t = t, [A]t = [A]0/2
[ A]0
[ A]0 kt 1 / 2
2
[ A]0
[ A]0
2
kt1/ 2
[ A]0
kt1/ 2
2
[ A]0
t 1 / 2
2k
54
First-order reactions
ln[A]
At+
time
t = 0, [A]
0 = [A]
ln[A]t = - kt
[ A]0
In[ A]0 kt1/ 2
2
[ A]0
In
In[ A] kt1 / 2
2
[ A]0 / 2
kt1/ 2
ln
[ A]0
In
1
ln
kt1 / 2
2
ln 1 ln 2 = -kt, where ln 1 =
0
55
Hence,
t1 / 2
ln 2
t1 / 2
or
0.693
concentration
[A]0/2
[A]0/4
[A]0/8
t1/2
time
56
Second-order reactions
1
1
kt
[ A ]t
[A]0
kt1 / 2
[ A]0
[ A]0
2
2
1
kt1/ 2
[ A]0
[ A]0
1
kt1/ 2
[ A]0
1
t 1 / 2
k [ A]0
57
[A]0
concentration
[A]0/2 t1/2
[A]0/4
t1/2
[A]0/8
t1/2
time
58
59
60
61
2
k A i
62
Conceptual
Plan:
k = 0.271 s1
t1/2
k
t1/2
Relationships:
Solution:
Check:
63
64
65
H2 C
CH2 (g)
H3C CH
CH2 (g)
67
68
4.
Graphical Determination of
69
70
71
72
73
74
1.
Collision Theory
75
2. Effective Collisions
Collisions in which these two conditions
are met (and therefore lead to reaction)
are called effective collisions
The higher the frequency of effective
collisions, the faster the reaction rate
Any factor that can increase the
frequency of effective collisions would
increase the rate of a reaction
76
Orientation Effect
78
BrNO collision
79
3. Orientation Factor
The proper orientation results when the
atoms are aligned in such a way that the
old bonds can break and the new bonds
can form
The more complex the reactant
molecules, the less frequently they will
collide with the proper orientation
80
Reaction Coordinate
Diagrams
It is helpful to
visualize energy
changes
throughout a
process on a
reaction
coordinate
diagram like this
one for the
rearrangement of
methyl isonitrile.
81
Reaction Coordinate
Diagrams
It shows the energy
of the reactants and
products (and,
therefore, E).
The high point on the
diagram is the
transition state.
The species present at the transition state
is called the activated complex.
The energy gap between the reactants
and the activated complex is the
activation energy barrier.
82
4. Activation Energy
The activation energy, Ea is a minimum
amount of energy required to initiate
reaction:
Molecules must possess a certain minimum
kinetic energy called the activation energy
for a reaction to occur
energy needed to break the bonds of the
reacting molecules
reaction with low activation energy is easier to
take place, and is faster
83
84
Activation Energy
The activation energy may be shown on diagrams
called energy profiles. The energy barrier, Ea is the
activation energy for forward reaction
E
n
e
r
g
y
Ea
reactants
H = -ve
E
n
e
r
g
y
products
Ea
H = +ve
products
reactants
Progress of reaction
Progress of reaction
Activated state
Activated state
E
n
e
r
g
y
Ea (forward)
Ea (reversed)
reactants
E
n
e
r
g
y
Ea (reversed)
Ea (forward)
products
products
reactants
Progress of reaction
Progress of reaction
H = Ea (forward) Ea (reversed)
H = Ea (forward) Ea (reversed)
H = -ve
H = +ve
A reversible reaction has two activation energies:The activation energy ,Ea (forward) , is the energy difference between
the activated state and the reactants
The activation energy ,Ea (reverse) is the energy difference between the
activated state and the products.
86
SOLUTION:
Potential Energy
PLAN:
Ea= 19
kJ
O3+O
Hrxn
kJ
transition
state
= -392
2O2
Reaction progress
87
88
90
5. Collision Frequency
The collision frequency is the number of
collisions that happen per unit time
The more collisions per second there are,
the more collisions can be effective and
lead to product formation
91
FACTORS CONTROLLING
RATES OF REACTIONS
1
CONCENTRATIONS OF REACTANTS
TEMPERATURE
92
1. Reactant Concentration
Generally, the larger the concentration of
reactant molecules, the faster the reaction
increases the frequency of effective
collisions between reactant molecules
concentration of gases depends on the
partial pressure of the gas
higher pressure = higher concentration
93
3. Temperature
Increasing the temperature raises the average
kinetic energy of the reactant molecules
Increasing the temperature increases the
number of molecules with sufficient kinetic
energy to overcome the activation energy,
leads to increase in frequancy of effective
collisions. Hence, increasing the rate of
reaction
The distribution of kinetic energy is shown by
the Boltzmann distribution curves
95
96
4. Catalyst
Catalysts are substances that affect
the rate of a reaction without being
consumed
Catalysts generally speed up a
reaction
They give the reactant molecules a
different path to follow with a lower
activation energy
97
98
99
101
Arrhenius Plots
The Arrhenius Equation: The integrated form
103
y = mx + c
104
105
Arrhenius Equation:
Two-Point Form
If you only have two (T,k) data points, the
following forms of the Arrhenius Equation
can be used:
106
Conceptual
Plan:
Ea, kJ/mol
T1, k1, T2, k2
Ea
Relationships:
Solution:
Check:
108
Reaction Mechanisms
The sequence of events that describes the actual
process by which reactants become products is
called the reaction mechanism.
Reactions may occur all at once or through
several discrete steps.
Each of these processes is known as an
elementary reaction or elementary process.
In a multistep process, one of the steps will be
slower than all others.
The overall reaction cannot occur faster than this
slowest, rate-determining step.
109
Overall reaction:
H2(g) + 2 ICl(g) 2 HCl(g) + I2(g)
Mechanism:
Step 1: H2(g) + ICl(g) HCl(g) + HI(g)
Step 2: HI(g) + ICl(g) HCl(g) + I2(g)
110
Intermediates
Overall: H2(g) + 2 ICl(g) 2 HCl(g) + I2(g)
Step (1): H2(g) + ICl(g) HCl(g) + HI(g)
Step (2): HI(g) + ICl(g) HCl(g) + I2(g)
111
Molecularity
The number of reactant particles in an
elementary step is called its molecularity
A unimolecular step involves one particle
A bimolecular step involves two particles
112
Bimolecular reaction
A+B
Bimolecular reaction
A+A
2)
Rate = k2[HI][ICl]
114
Reaction Mechanisms
The overall progress of a chemical reaction can be
represented at the molecular level by a series of
simple elementary steps or elementary reactions.
The sequence of elementary steps that leads to
product formation is the reaction mechanism.
NET EQUATION 2NO (g) + O2 (g)
2NO2 (g)
NO + NO
N2O2
N2O2 + O2
2NO2
Overall reaction:
2NO + O2
2NO2
115
116
117
(g)
NO
(g)
119
120
Validating a Mechanism
121
122
k1 N O
1. 2 NO
(g)
2 2(g)
Fast
k1
Fast
123
Rate = k2[O3][O]
124