Chemical kinetics is the study of reaction rates and how they are affected by various factors such as concentration, temperature, and surface area. Reaction rates can be expressed using rate laws, which relate the reaction rate to reactant concentrations and a rate constant. Rate laws are determined experimentally and can indicate the reaction order. Elementary reactions occur in a single step while complex reactions proceed through multiple steps. The slowest step in a reaction mechanism determines the overall rate law.
Chemical kinetics is the study of reaction rates and how they are affected by various factors such as concentration, temperature, and surface area. Reaction rates can be expressed using rate laws, which relate the reaction rate to reactant concentrations and a rate constant. Rate laws are determined experimentally and can indicate the reaction order. Elementary reactions occur in a single step while complex reactions proceed through multiple steps. The slowest step in a reaction mechanism determines the overall rate law.
Chemical kinetics is the study of reaction rates and how they are affected by various factors such as concentration, temperature, and surface area. Reaction rates can be expressed using rate laws, which relate the reaction rate to reactant concentrations and a rate constant. Rate laws are determined experimentally and can indicate the reaction order. Elementary reactions occur in a single step while complex reactions proceed through multiple steps. The slowest step in a reaction mechanism determines the overall rate law.
Chemical kinetics is the study of reaction rates and how they are affected by various factors such as concentration, temperature, and surface area. Reaction rates can be expressed using rate laws, which relate the reaction rate to reactant concentrations and a rate constant. Rate laws are determined experimentally and can indicate the reaction order. Elementary reactions occur in a single step while complex reactions proceed through multiple steps. The slowest step in a reaction mechanism determines the overall rate law.
• Chemical kinetics is the study of reaction rates, how
reaction rates change under varying conditions, and what molecular events occur during the overall reactions. Factors affecting the reaction rates • Concentration of reactants Often the rate of reaction increases when the concentration of a reactant is increased. In some reactions, however, the rate is unaffected by the concentration of a particular reactant, as long as it is present at some concentration. • Concentration of catalyst A catalyst is a substance that increases the rate of reaction without being consumed in the overall reaction. Because the catalyst is not consumed by the reaction, it does not appear in the balanced chemical equation. • Temperature at which the reaction occurs. Usually reactions speed up when the temperature increases. It takes less time to boil an egg at sea level than on a mountaintop, where water boils at a lower temperature. Reactions during cooking go faster at higher temperature • Surface area of a solid reactant or catalyst If a reaction involves a solid with a gas or liquid, the surface area of the solid affects the reaction rate. Because the reaction occurs at the surface of the solid, the rate increases with increasing surface area. A wood fire burns faster if the logs are chopped into smaller pieces. Similarly, the surface area of a solid catalyst is important to the rate of reaction. The greater the surface area per unit volume, the faster the reaction Reaction rate • The reaction rate, which is the change in concentration of a reactant or a product with time (M/s). Consider a general reaction, A B. We quickly measure the starting reactant concentration (conc A1) at t1, allow the reaction to proceed, and then quickly measure the reactant concentration again (conc A2) at t2. The change in concentration divided by the change in time gives the average rate Average, Instantaneous and Initial Reaction rates • Average rate In most reactions, not only the concentration changes, but the rate itself varies with time as the reaction proceeds. The average rate of the reaction is the reaction rate divided by the time interval of the reaction. • Instantaneous rate, the rate at a particular instant during the reaction. • Initial rate, the instantaneous rate at the moment the reactants are mixed. Expressing the rate in terms of reactnats and products The Rate Law and Its Components • The rate law expresses the rate as a function of reactant concentrations, product concentrations, and temperature. • A rate law is an equation that relates the rate of a reaction to the concentrations of reactants (and catalyst) raised to various powers. • The proportionality constant k, called the rate constant, is specific for a given reaction at a given temperature; it does not change as the reaction proceeds (k does change with temperature and therefore determines how temperature affects the rate). The exponents m and n, called the reaction orders, define how the rate is affected by reactant concentration. • A key point to remember is that the components of the rate law—rate, reaction orders, and rate constant—must be found by experiment; they cannot be deduced from the reaction stoichiometry. • The rate expression tells us how the appearance/disappearance rates of the products and reactants relate to one another; the rate law tells us how the rate is related to the concentrations (or pressures) of reactants and the rate constant is a constant of proportionality that comes out of the rate law. An experimental approach to finding the components of rate law
1. Using concentration measurements to find the
initial rate 2. Using initial rates from several experiments to find the reaction orders. 3. Using these values to calculate the rate constant Reaction order terminology • The reaction order with respect to a given reactant species equals the exponent of the concentration of that species in the rate law, as determined experimentally. • The overall order of a reaction equals the sum of the orders of the reactant species in the rate law. Method of Initial Rates • The method of initial rates involves a series of experiments in which the initial concentrations of some reactants are held constant and others are varied in convenient multiples in order to determine the rate law for that reaction. • Speculation about how a reaction occurs at the molecular level must be based on measurements of reaction rates. There are many experimental approaches, but all must obtain the results quickly and reproducibly. We consider four common methods, with specific examples 1) Spectrometric Methods 2) Conductometric Methods 3) Manometric Methods 4) Direct Chemical Methods Integrated rate laws (Concentration- Time equations) • Using calculus, we can transform a rate law into a mathematical relationship between concentration and time called an integrated rate law. First Order reaction A first-order reaction is a reaction whose rate depends on the reactant concentration raised to the first power. In a first-order reaction of the type A product The rate is ∆[𝐴] 𝑅𝑎𝑡𝑒 = − ∆t From the rate law, we also know that Rate = k[A] First Order reaction Second-Order Reactions • A second-order reaction is a reaction whose rate depends on the concentration of one reactant raised to the second power or on the concentrations of two different reactants, each raised to the first power. The simpler type involves only one kind of reactant molecule: A product Zero-order reactions Half-life (t1/2) • The half-life (t1/2) of a reaction is the time required for the reactant concentration to reach half its initial value. A half-life is expressed in time units appropriate for a given reaction and is characteristic of that reaction at a given temperature. Elementary and Complex reactions • A simple reaction takes place in a single step. Simple reactions are also known as elementary reactions. One step reactions are elementary reactions. • Reactions which do not take place in a single step but take place in a sequence of a number of elementary steps are called as complex reactions. Elementary Reactions and Molecularity • An elementary reaction represents, at the molecular level, a single stage in the progress of the overall reaction. • An elementary step is characterized by its molecularity. The molecularity of an elementary reaction refers to the number of free atoms, ions, or molecules that enter into the reaction. • The molecularity of a reaction is the number of molecules reacting in an elementary step. Elementary reactions • Uni-molecular reaction: It is an elementary reaction that involves one reactant molecule; • Bi-molecular reaction: It is an elementary reaction that involves two reactant molecules; • Ter-molecular reaction: It is an elementary reaction that involves three reactant molecules. Rate Laws for Elementary Reactions • For an elementary reaction, the rate is proportional to the product of the concentration of each reactant molecules see below: • For uni-molecular reactions: A B + C. Rate = k*[A] • For bi-molecular reactions: A + B C+D Rate = k*[A]*[B] • For ter-molecular reactions: A+B+C D+E Rate = k*[A]*[B]*[C] Complex Reactions • Reactions which do not take place in a single step but take place in a sequence of a number of elementary steps are called as complex reactions. • When we study a reaction that has more than one elementary step, the rate law for the overall process is given by the rate-determining step, which is the slowest step in the sequence of steps leading to product formation. • Intermediates appear in the mechanism of the reaction (that is, the elementary steps) but not in the overall balanced equation. Keep in mind that an intermediate is always formed in an early elementary step and consumed in a later elementary step. Correlating the Mechanism with the Rate Law • Mechanisms with a Slow Initial Step 2. Both steps are bimolecular, so they are chemically reasonable. 3. The mechanism gives the rate law for the overall equation. To show this, we write the rate laws for the elementary steps: (1) Rate1 = k1[NO2][F2] (2) Rate2 = k2[NO2][F] Step 1 is the rate-determining step and therefore gives the overall rate law, with k1 = k. Because the second molecule of NO2 appears in the step that follows the rate-determining step, it does not appear in the overall rate law. Thus, we see that the overall rate law includes only species active in the reaction up to and including those in the rate-determining step Mechanisms with a Fast Initial Step At equilibrium,