AOSC 434 AIR POLLUTION RUSSELL R. DICKERSON

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AOSC 434 AIR POLLUTION RUSSELL R. DICKERSON LECTURE 8 AOSC 434 AIR POLLUTION RUSSELL R. DICKERSON

RECAP: KINETICS First Order A → Products N₂O₅ → NO₂ + NO₃ (1) Rate equation: Second Order A + B → Products NO + O₃ → NO₂ + O₂ (2) d[A]/dt = d[B]/dt = - k[A][B]

Third Order A + B + C → Products O + O₂ + M → O₃ + M (3) Rate equation: d[A]/dt = d[B]/dt = d[C]/dt = -k[A][B][C] Units of the rate of a reaction are: conc./time. Rate constants for reactions of order n must have units:

Lifetime If t = 1/k then , then the time corresponding to 1/k = τ, the lifetime. This is similar to “half life” concept: Pseudo first order rate constants If [B] is approximately constant then k’ ≈ k[B].

III KINETICS b) Activation Energy The energy hill that reactants must climb in order to produce products; a barrier to thermodynamic equilibrium ENERGY DIAGRAM AB* Ea C + D A + B ΔH A + B → AB* AB* + M → AB + M* AB* → C + D (Activated complex) (Quenching) (Reaction)

c) Arrhenius Expressions The Arrhenius or pre-exponential factor, “A” is related to the number of collisions the reactants make, and has a maximum value of about 2x10⁻¹º cm³ s⁻¹ for a second order reaction. If the orientation of the reactants is important, and it usually is, then A << 10⁻¹º. is the activation energy in units of J/mole. For an endothermic reaction if is less than or equal to ΔHºrxn. If is positive then the reaction will go faster at higher temperature; if is negative, then the reaction will go slower at high temperature. For example, for Reactions (1) to (3):

The rate constant for Reaction (3), k₃, holds only if the reaction proceeds in an argon or helium atmosphere. If the third body (M) is a diatomic or triatomic, the rate constant goes up. For a N₂O atmosphere k is 1.6 time faster, and water vapor it is fifteen times faster than in air. A recent evaluation (NASA, 2015) of the rate constant k₃ for the Earth’s atmosphere is given in a different form: GENERAL EXAMPLES (2) What happen if dilute car exhaust mixes with “clean” air? Let [NO]0 = 1.0 ppm and [O₃]0 = 50 ppb. Assume P = 1.0 atm and T = 25º C. What is the rate of loss of ozone? Note that we have to match the units of the concentrations to the rate constant.

Ozone disappears very quickly, but this is only the initial rate of loss. At the end of one second the concentration of the reactants, ozone especially, will be less than the initial concentration. To calculate a realistic rate of loss, we can assume that d[NO]/dt = 0. This is a pretty good assumption because [NO]>>[O₃]. Let k[NO] = k’ k’ = 0.45 s⁻¹ τ ≈ 2 s In 2.0 s the ozone concentration is down to e⁻¹ or to about 37% of the initial concentration. In 10 s the concentration is down to e⁻⁵ or 0.67%.

Equilibrium and Rate Constants At equilibrium production equals loss.

Equilibrium and Rate Constants For a reaction of arbitrary order: aA + bB = cC + dD

Photolysis Reactions Sunlight drives photochemical smog. How do we deal with this special class of reactions? AB + hv → AB* Photoexitation AB* → A + B Photodissociation or photolysis M + AB* → AB + M* Quenching AB* → AB + h Reemission The rate depends on the intensity of sunlight and chemical characteristics of AB. The rate constant is represented as j(AB) to distinguish it from ordinary first order rate constants.

Where: σ = absorption cross-section Φ = quantum yield I = solar intensity EXAMPLE NO₂ + h → NO + O j(NO₂) ≈ 1.0 x 10⁻² s⁻¹ (at noon) The lifetime of NO₂ with respect to photolysis is about 100 s. Steady State When a molecule is in “steady state” it’s concentration is constant. This means that the production and destruction rates are matched, it does not necessarily mean that the system is in thermodynamic equilibrium, but a system in equilibrium is also in steady state.

EXAMPLE A + B = C + D (1) A + B + M → AB + M (2) A + AB → 2A + B (3) Rate Equations

At steady state d[AB]/dt = 0. 0 and R2 = R3 At steady state d[AB]/dt = 0.0 and R2 = R3. k₂[A][B][M] = k₃[A][AB] Which means The concentration of AB depends only on the ratio of the rate constant for reactions 2 and 3, and on the concentration of B. It is independent of [A]. What is the steady state concentration of B? Any new reaction that are discovered can be added to the scheme in a similar manner.

Photostationary State Here is a real-world example. NO₂ + hv → NO + O (1) NO + O₃ → NO₂ + O₂ (2) O + O₂ + M → O₃ + M (3) If we assume ozone is in steady state then production equals loss. But what is ? R1 = R3 j(NO₂)[NO₂] = k₃[O][O₂][M]

Substituting What happens when the sun comes up on a polluted air mass Substituting What happens when the sun comes up on a polluted air mass? Let [NO] = 50 ppb and [NO₂] = 500 ppb. At noon j(NO₂) = 10⁻² s⁻¹, but near sunrise Later in the day j(NO₂) = 1.0x10⁻², if the ratio of NO:NO₂ remains the same: