Chem 300 - Ch 28/#3 Today’s To Do List Relaxation Methods & Fast Reactions Temperature Dependence Transition-State Theory.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chem Ch 28/#2 Todays To Do List l 1 st -Order Reaction Kinetics l ½-life & Reaction Order l 2 nd -Order Reactions l Reversible Reactions.
Advertisements

The Rate of Chemical Reactions 1.Rate Laws a.For generic reaction: aA + bB cC + dD b. Rate = k[A] x [B] y [Units of Rate always = M/s = mol/L s] c.Details.
Aquatic Chemical Kinetics Look at 3 levels of chemical change: –Phenomenological or observational Measurement of reaction rates and interpretation of data.
Reaction Rates (Chapter 13)
Topic 11: Kinetics Goes with Chapter 16: Silberberg
Kinetics: Rates and Mechanisms of Reactions
THE RATES OF REACTIONS Chapter 13. Reaction Rate The reaction rate is defined as the change in concentration of a species with time. Consider the reaction.
The next step in kinetics. * Molecules must collide to react. * Concentration affects rates because collisions are more likely. * Must collide hard enough.
Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part 2d: rate laws and mechanisms.
Chapter 14 Chemical Kinetics.
Outline:2/23/07 è è Today: Finish Chapter 16 è Chem Dept Seminar – è CAPA 10 – deadline moved to Mon. Ù Chemical Equilibrium: LeChâtelier’s principle.
Chemical Kinetics and Transition States Elementary Rate Laws k(T) Transition State Theory Catalysis.
Prentice-Hall © 2007 General Chemistry: Chapter 14 Slide 1 of Theoretical Models for Chemical Kinetics  Kinetic-Molecular theory can be used to.
Chapter 14 Chemical Kinetics
Chapter 14 Chemical Kinetics
This continues our discussion of kinetics (Chapter 13) from the previous lecture. We will also start Chapter 14 in this lecture.
Temperature dependence of reaction rates
Integration of the rate laws gives the integrated rate laws
Reaction order The rate law can be written in a generalized form: v = k [A] a [B] b …. where a is the order of the reaction with respect to the species.
Explain that reactions can occur by more than one step and that the slowest step determines the rate of the reaction (rate- determining step)
22.5 The temperature dependence of reaction rates Arrhenius equation: A is the pre-exponential factor; E a is the activation energy. The two quantities,
Lecture 18 (Ch 18) HW: Ch 18: 1, 3, 15, 41 Kinetics pt 2: Temperature Dependence of Rate Constants.
Chemistry 232 Chemical Kinetics. Chemical kinetics - speed or rate at which a reaction occurs How are rates of reactions affected by Reactant concentration?
Ch 15 Rates of Chemical Reactions Chemical Kinetics is a study of the rates of chemical reactions. Part 1 macroscopic level what does reaction rate mean?
Reaction Rate The rate of appearance of a product The rate of appearance of a product or disappearance of a reactant or disappearance of a reactant units:
Chapter 14: Rates of Reaction Chemistry 1062: Principles of Chemistry II Andy Aspaas, Instructor.
Dr. Floyd Beckford Lyon College
Chemical Kinetics Chapter 14 Chemical Kinetics. Chemical Kinetics Studies the rate at which a chemical process occurs. Besides information about the speed.
Chemical Kinetics CHAPTER 14 Part B
= rate = rate constant derived definition: Rate law can be written from molecularity Lowers the E a by making a new ______________ Why? Experimentally.
Things to know…….  Rate depends on temperature  Temp is the avg. KE  Order depends on rxn mechanism  Rate is determined by the slow step  Temp affects.
Equilibrium Rate Constant Integrated Rate Law Activation Energy Reaction Mechanisms Rate Laws.
Rates of Reactions Why study rates?
Kinetics The Study of Rates of Reaction. Rate of a Reaction The speed at which the reactants disappear and the products are formed determines the rate.
Topics about reaction kinetics
CHAPTER 14 Chemical Kinetics. Chemical Reactions There are two things that we are interested in concerning chemical reactions: 1) Where is the system.
1 Chemical Kinetics: Rates of Reactions Chapter 13 Svante A. Arrhenius * Developed concept of activation energy; asserted solutions of salts.
1 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.
1 Chemical Kinetics (4 lectures) Dr. Paul T. Maragh Tue. 5:00 p.m. / Wed. 9:00 a.m. 1 full question on C10K Paper 1.
Activation energy. Review of Exothermic Reactants Ep is higher than Products Ep. Now, we must consider the activation energy (the energy needed so that.
From the Arrhenius equation we have: 301. From the Arrhenius equation we have: 302.
Chemical Kinetics. Kinetics The study of reaction rates. Spontaneous reactions are reactions that will happen - but we can’t tell how fast. (Spontaneity.
AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 12 KINETICS. 2 Chemical Kinetics Thermodynamics tells us if a reaction can occur Kinetics tells us how quickly the reaction occurs.
Kinetics  The study of reaction rates.  Spontaneous reactions are reactions that will happen - but we can’t tell how fast.  Diamond will spontaneously.
13-1 CHEM 102, Spring 2012, LA TECH CTH 328 9:30-10:45 am Instructor: Dr. Upali Siriwardane Office: CTH 311 Phone Office.
Reaction Mechanisms in Inorganic Chemistry. Elementary Reaction Kinetics: A Review of the Fundamentals.
PRT 140 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY PROGRAMME INDUSTRIAL CHEMICAL PROCESS SEM /2014 CHEMICAL KINETIC BY PN ROZAINI ABDULLAH SCHOOL OF BIOPROSES ENGINEERING.
Collision Model, Energy Diagrams & Arrhenius Equation Section 7 Chemical Kinetics Chapter 12.
A Radioactivity Example Carbon-14 is unstable. It decays very slowly by a process called beta-decay. A beta particle is an electron. It is ejected from.
A.P. Exam Review Regular Review Day 4. Big Idea #4 Rates of chemical reactions are determined by details of the molecular collisions.
Determination of the rate law
Kinetics Concept of rate of reaction
Chem. 1B – 10/22 Lecture See Corrections to Slide 11.
Chapter 14 Chemical Kinetics. Reaction Rates Combustion of propane (C 3 H 8 ) Rusting of iron (Fe 2 O 3 ) Rate at which reactants disappear / products.
Thermodynamics and kinetics of transformation reactions Chapter 12.
Enzyme Kinetics.
Chemistry 232 Chemical Kinetics.
Chemistry 1011 Slot 51 Chemistry 1011 TOPIC Rate of Reaction TEXT REFERENCE Masterton and Hurley Chapter 11.
CHEMICAL KINETICS H 2 S (g) + Zn 2+ (aq) ⇆ ZnS (s) + 2H + (aq) Chemical reactions can be viewed from different perspectives 4D-1 (of 21) STOICHIOMETRY.
Review Reaction mechanism Br 2 (l) step 1 Br 2 2 Br. h step 2Br. + step 3 C 5 H overall Br 2 C 5 H 12  HBr + C 5 H 11. Br.  C 5 H 11 Br + C 5 H.
13-1 CHEM 102, Spring 2015, LA TECH Instructor: Dr. Upali Siriwardane Office: CTH 311 Phone Office Hours: M,W 8:00-9:30.
Kinetics. Reaction Rate  Reaction rate is the rate at which reactants disappear and products appear in a chemical reaction.  This can be expressed as.
Chemical Kinetics. Kinetics The study of reaction rates. Spontaneous reactions are reactions that will happen - but we can’t tell how fast. (Spontaneity.
Answer the following questions:
Review Reaction mechanism Br2(l) + C5H12(l)  C5H11Br(l) + HBr(l)
Review Reaction mechanism Br2(l) + C5H12(l)  C5H11Br(l) + HBr(l)
Rates of reaction.
Review Reaction mechanism Br2(l) + C5H12(l)  C5H11Br(l) + HBr(l)
Activation energy.
Presentation transcript:

Chem Ch 28/#3 Today’s To Do List Relaxation Methods & Fast Reactions Temperature Dependence Transition-State Theory

Reversible Reactions l A = B k 1 = forward reaction k -1 = reverse reaction l At equilibrium: -d[A]/dt = d[B]/dt = 0 Rate forward = k 1 [A] Rate reverse = k -1 [B] k 1 [A] eq = k -1 [B] eq k 1 /k -1 = [B] eq /[A] eq = K eq

Reaching Equilibrium

The Mixing Problem with Fast Reactions l Consider: H + (aq) + OH - (aq)  H 2 O(aq) with k 1 = 1.4 x dm 3 /mol-s at 298 K l Calculate t 1/2 when [H + ] 0 = [OH - ] 0 = 1 x mol/dm 3 Recall: K w = [H + ] eq [OH - ] eq = 1 x nd -order Reaction: t 1/2 = 1/(k 1 [A] 0 ) = 1/(1.4x10 11 )(1x10 -5 ) t 1/2 = 1 x s << s (mixing time)

Relaxation Methods l Start with a system at equilibrium. l Perturb the system to knock it out of equilibr. T-jump P-jump pH- and pOH-jump l Measure time necessary to relax to new equilibr. state. l k 1 and k -1 are related to this relaxa. time (  )

T-Jump Relaxation l Relaxation processes tend to decay exponentially with time:  x =  x 0 e -t/  where  = relaxation time = 1/e of the time for a system to decay to its new equilibrium state after a “shock” such as a sudden  T. If x = [B], then  [B] = the change in [B] as a reaction approaches its new equilibr.  [B] =  [B] 0 e -t/ 

l  is uniquely related to k 1 and k -1 For A  B  = 1/(k 1 + k -1 ) For A + B  P  = 1/{k 1 ([A] e + [B] e ) + k -1 } l Plot ln [B] vs t & measure slope to find k’s.

Relaxation for A  B

Some Examples l Ionic aqueous reactions are fast! l H + + Ac -  Hac k 1 =3.5 x dm 3 /mol-s l H + + NH 3 +  NH 4 + k 1 = 4.3 x 10 10

T-Dependence of k: The Arrhenius Equation l k carries the T-dependence of the rate law. l Most common is an exponential growth: k = A e -Ea/RT (The Arrhenius Eq.) ln k = ln A – E a /RT A = pre-exponential factor E a = Activation Energy Plot of ln k vs 1/T will be linear with slope –E a /R and intercept ln A.

Reaction Energy Diagram

2HI(g)  H 2 (g) + I 2 (g) E a = 184 kJ/mol

Transition-State Theory l A + B  P dP/dt = k[A][B] l Assume an initial equilibr - l A + B  AB ‡  P AB ‡ = activated complex l K ‡ = [AB ‡ ]/[A][B]

A + B  AB ‡  P l An alternate rate in terms of 2 nd step: dP/dt = c [AB ‡ ] c = freq. with which complex crosses barrier max. l Combining: dP/dt = k[A][B] = c [AB ‡ ] = c [A][B] K ‡ k = c K ‡ Let c  = {k B T/(2  m ‡ )} 1/2

Continued l Substituting: k = c K ‡ = (k B T/h) K ‡ l From thermo:  ‡ G o = -RT ln K ‡ l K ‡ = e -  ‡Gº/RT l k = (k B T/h) e -  ‡Gº/RT l But  ‡ G o =  ‡ H o – T  ‡ S o l k = (k B T/h) e  ‡Sº/R e -  ‡Hº/RT

Relating to E a l Comparing with experimental: k = A e -Ea/RT E a =  ‡ H o + RT Thus  ‡ H o can be obtained from empirical data, then  ‡ S o from  ‡ G o =  ‡ H o – T  ‡ S o A = (e 2 k B T/h) e  ‡Sº/R l Thus A (through  ‡Sº) indicates relative structures of reactants & activated complex.

Next Time Start Chapter 29: Reaction Mechanisms Elementary Reactions Molecularity Detailed Balance