0% found this document useful (0 votes)
22 views16 pages

The Activation Energy of Combined Reactions: e A e A e A K K K

An explosion occurs when the rate of chain branching exceeds the rate of chain termination. This analysis shows that the concentration of H radicals will rapidly increase when kbranch > kterm, i.e. when the rate of chain branching is greater than the rate of chain termination. This rapid increase in H radical concentration leads to an explosive reaction.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
22 views16 pages

The Activation Energy of Combined Reactions: e A e A e A K K K

An explosion occurs when the rate of chain branching exceeds the rate of chain termination. This analysis shows that the concentration of H radicals will rapidly increase when kbranch > kterm, i.e. when the rate of chain branching is greater than the rate of chain termination. This rapid increase in H radical concentration leads to an explosive reaction.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 16

The activation energy of combined reactions

• Consider that each of the rate constants of the following reactions


A + A → A* + A (E1)
A + A* → A + A (E1’)
A* → P (E2)
has an Arrhenius-like temperature dependence, one gets
k1 k 2 A1e  E 1/ RT A2 e  E2 / RT
'
 '
k1 A1' e  E1 / RT
A1 A2 ( E1  E 2  E1' ) / RT
 e
A1'
Thus the composite rate constant also has an Arrhenius-like form with
activation energy,
E = E1 + E2 – E1’

Whether or not the composite rate constant will increase with


temperature depends on the value of E,

if E > 0, k will increase with the increase of temperature


Combined activation energy
• Theoretical problem 22.20
The reaction mechanism
A2 ↔ A + A (fast)
A + B → P (slow)
Involves an intermediate A. Deduce the
rate law for the reaction.

• Solution:
Chain reactions
• Chain reactions: a reaction intermediate produced in one
step generates an intermediate in a subsequent step, then that
intermediate generates another intermediate, and so on.

• Chain carriers: the intermediates in a chain reaction. It could be


radicals (species with unpaired electrons), ions, etc.

• Initiation step:
• Propagation steps:
• Termination steps:
23.1 The rate laws of chain
reactions
• Consider the thermal decomposition of acetaldehyde
CH3CHO(g) → CH4(g) + CO(g)
v = k[CH3CHO]3/2
it indeed goes through the following steps:
1. Initiation: CH3CHO → . CH3 + .CHO ki
v = ki [CH3CHO]
2. Propagation: CH3CHO + . CH3 → CH4 + CH3CO. kp
Propagation: CH3CO. → .CH3 + CO k’p
3. Termination: .CH3 + .CH3 → CH3CH3 kt

• The. net rates of change of the intermediates are:


d [ CH 3 ]
 ki [CH 3CHO]  k p [ .CH 3 ][CH 3CHO]  k ,p [CH 3CO. ]  2kt [ .CH 3 ]2
dt
d [CH 3 CO . ]
 k p [ .CH 3 ][CH 3 CHO ]  k ,p [CH 3CO . ]
dt
• Applying the steady state approximation:
0  k i [CH 3 CHO]  k p [ .CH 3 ][CH 3 CHO]  k ,p [CH 3 CO . ]  2k t [ .CH 3 ]2

0  k p [ .CH 3 ][CH 3CHO ]  k ,p [CH 3CO . ]

• Sum of the above two equations equals:


k i [CH 3CHO ]  2k t [.CH 3 ]2  0

• thus the steady state concentration of [.CH3] is:


1/ 2
 k 
[.CH 3 ]   i  [CH 3CHO ]1 / 2
 2k t 

• The rate of formation of CH4 can now be expressed as


1/ 2
d [CH 4 ]  k 
 k p [ .CH 3 ][CH 3CHO ]  k p  i  [CH 3CHO ]3 / 2
dt  2k t 

the above result is in agreement with the three-halves order


observed experimentally.
• Example: The hydrogen-bromine reaction has a complicated rate
law rather than the second order reaction as anticipated.
H2(g) + Br2(g) → 2HBr(g)
Yield
k[ H 2 ][ Br2 ]3 / 2
v
[ Br2 ]  k '[ HBr ]

The following mechanism has been proposed to account for the above
rate law.
1. Initiation: Br2 + M → Br. + Br. + M ki
2. Propagation: Br. + H2 → HBr + H. kp1
H. + Br2 → HBr + Br. kp2
3. Retardation: H. + HBr → H2 + Br. kr
4. Termination: Br. + Br. + M → Br2 + M* kt
derive the rate law based on the above mechanism.
• The net rates of formation of the two intermediates are
d[ H . ]
 k p1 [ Br . ][ H 2]  k p 2 [ H . ][ Br2 ]  k r [ H . ][ HBr ]
dt
d [ Br . ]
 2k i [ Br2 ][ M ]  k p1 [ Br . ][ H 2 ]  k p 2 [ H . ][ Br2 ]  k r [ H . ][ HBr ]  2k t [ Br . ]2 [ M ]
dt
• The steady-state concentrations of the above two intermediates can
be obtained by solving the following two equations:
k p1 [ Br . ][ H 2]  k p 2 [ H . ][ Br2 ]  k r [ H . ][ HBr ]  0

2k i [ Br2 ][ M ]  k p1 [ Br . ][ H 2 ]  k p 2 [ H . ][ Br2 ]  k r [ H . ][ HBr ]  2k t [ Br . ]2 [ M ]  0


1/ 2
k 
[ Br . ]   i  [ Br2 ]1 / 2
 kt 

. k p1 (k i / k t )1 / 2 [ H 2 ][ Br2 ]1 / 2
[H ] 
k p 2 [ Br2 ]  k r [ HBr ]

• substitute the above results to the rate law of [HBr]


d [ HBr ]
 k p1 [ Br . ][ H 2 ]  k p 2 [ H . ][ Br2 ]  k r [ H . ][ HBr ]
dt
1/ 2 3/2
d [ HBr ] 2k p1 (k i / k t ) [ H 2 ][ Br2 ]

dt [ Br2 ]  (k r / k p 2 )[ HBr ]
continued

• The above results has the same form as the empirical rate law, and
the two empirical rate constants can be identified as
1/ 2
k  kr
k  2k p  i  k, 
 kt  k p2

• Effects of HBr, H2, and Br2 on the reaction rate based on the
equation
1/ 2 3/2
d [ HBr ] 2k p1 (k i / k t ) [ H 2 ][ Br2 ]

dt [ Br2 ]  (k r / k p 2 )[ HBr ]
• Self-test 23.1 Deduce the rate law for the
production of HBr when the initiation step
is the photolysis, or light-induced
decomposition, of Br2 into two bromine
atoms, Br.. Let the photolysis rate be v =
Iabs, where Iabs is the intensity of absorbed
radiation.
• Hint: the initiation rate of Br. ?
Exercises 23.1b: On the basis of the
following proposed mechanism, account
for the experimental fact that the rate law
for the decomposition
2N2O5(g) → 4NO2(g) + O2(g)
is v = k[N2O5].

(1) N2O5 ↔ NO2 + NO3 k1, k1’


(2) NO2 + NO3 → NO2 + O2 + NO k2
(3) NO + N2O5 → NO2 + NO2 + NO2 k3
23.2 Explosions
• Thermal explosion: a very rapid reaction arising from a rapid increase of
reaction rate with increasing temperature.

• Chain-branching explosion: occurs when the number of chain centres


grows exponentially.

• An example of both types of explosion is the following reaction


2H2(g) + O2(g) → 2H2O(g)
1. Initiation: H2 → H. + H .

2. Propagation H2 + .OH → H. + H2O kp

3. Branching: O2 + .H → .O + .OH kb1


.O + H2 → .OH + H. Kb2

4. Termination H. + Wall → ½ H2 kt1


H. + O2 + M → HO2. + M* kt2
The explosion limits of the H2 + O2
reaction
• Analyzing the reaction of hydrogen and oxygen (see preceding
slide), show that an explosion occurs when the rate of chain
branching exceeds that of chain termination.

Method: 1. Set up the corresponding rate laws for the reaction


intermediates and then apply the steady-state
approximation.
2. Identify the rapid increase in the concentration of H.
atoms.
.
d[ H ]
 v init  k p [ .OH ][ H 2 ]  k b1 [ H . ][O2 ]  k[O ][ H 2 ]  k t 1 [ H . ]  k t 2 [ H . ][O2 ][ M ]
dt

d [ .OH ]
  k p [ .OH ][ H 2 ]  k b1 [ H . ][O2 ]  k b 2 [O ][ H 2 ]
dt

d [ .O]
 kb1[ H . ][O2 ]  kb 2 [ .O][ H 2 ]
dt

Applying the steady-state approximation


 k p [ .OH ][ H 2 ]  k b1 [ H . ][Oto .OH and .O gives
2 ]  k b 2 [O ][ H 2 ]  0

k b1 [ H . ][O2 ]  k b 2 [O ][ H 2 ]  0
kb1[ H . ][O2 ]
[ .O ] 
kb 2 [ H 2 ]

. 2kb1[ H . ][O2 ]
[ OH ] 
k p[ H 2 ]
Therefore, d[ H . ]
 v init  (2k b1 [O2 ]  k t 1  k t 2 [O2 ][ M ])[ H . ]
dt
we write kbranch = 2kb1[O2] and kterm = kt1 + kt2[O2][M], then
d[ H . ]
 v init  (k branch  k term )[ H . ]
dt
At low O2 concentrations, termination dominates branching, so kterm >
v
kbranch. Then [ H . ]  k initk (1  e ( kterm  kbranch ) t ) this solution corresponds
term branch

to steady combustion of hydrogen.

At high O2 concentrations, branching dominates termination, kbranch >


v init
kterm. Then [ H . ]  ( e ( kbranch  kterm ) t  1)
 k term  kbranch

This is an explosive increase in the concentration of radicals!!!


• Self-test 23.2 Calculate the variation in radical
composition when rates of branching and
termination are equal.
• Solution:
d[ H . ]
 v init  (k branch  k term )[ H . ]
dt

kbranch = 2kb1[O2] and kterm = kt1 + kt2[O2][M],

d[ H . ]
 vinit
dt
The integrated solution is [H.] = vinit t

You might also like