Lecture 4 Chemical Kinetics
Lecture 4 Chemical Kinetics
Lecture 4 Chemical Kinetics
16-2
Factors That Influence Reaction Rate
• Particles must collide in order to react.
• The higher the concentration of reactants, the greater
the reaction rate.
– A higher concentration of reactant particles allows a
greater number of collisions.
• The physical state of the reactants influences
reaction
rate.
– Substances must mix in order for particles to collide.
• The higher the temperature, the greater the
reaction
rate.
– At higher temperatures particles have more energy and
therefore collide more often and more effectively.
16-3
Figure 2.4 Sufficient collision energy is required for a
reaction to occur.
16-4
Expressing the Reaction Rate
16-5
Table 2.1 Concentration of O3 at Various Times in its
Reaction with C2H4 at 303 K
Concentration of O3
Time (s) (mol/L)
0.0 3.20x10-5 [C2H 4]
10.0 rate = -
2.42x10-5 t
20.0 1.95x10-5 [O3]
=-
30.0 1.63x10-5 t
40.0 1.40x10-5
50.0 1.23x10-5
60.0 1.10x10-5
16-6
Figure 2.5 Three types of reaction rates for the reaction of O3
and C2H4.
16-7
Figure 2.6A Plots of [reactant] and [product] vs. time.
C2H4 + O3 → C2H4O + O2
[C2H4] [O3]
Rate = - =-
t t
[C2H4O] [O2]
= =
t t
16-8
Figure 2.6B Plots of [reactant] and [product] vs. time.
H2 + I2 → 2HI
[HI] increases twice as
fast as [H2]
decreases.
16-9
In general, for the reaction
aA + bB → cC +
dD
16-10
Sample Problem 2.1 Expressing Rate in Terms of Changes in
Concentration with Time
PROBLEM: Hydrogen gas has a nonpolluting combustion product
(water vapor). It is used as a fuel abord the space
shuttle and in earthbound cars with prototype engines:
2H2(g) + O2(g) → 2H2O(g)
(a) Express the rate in terms of changes in [H2], [O2],
and [H2O] with time.
SOLUTION:
[O2] 1 [H2]
(a) Rate = - =- = 1 [H2O]
t 2 t 2 t
16-12
The Rate Law
16-13
Reaction Orders
A reaction has an individual order “with respect to” or “in”
each reactant.
For the simple reaction A → products:
If the rate doubles when [A] doubles, the rate depends on
[A]1 and the reaction is first order with respect to A.
If the rate does not change when [A] doubles, the rate does
not depend on [A], and the reaction is zero order with
respect to A.
16-14
Figure 2.7 Plots of reactant concentration, [A], vs. time for
first-, second-, and zero-order reactions.
16-15
Figure 2.8 Plots of rate vs. reactant concentration, [A], for
first-, second-, and zero-order reactions.
16-16
Individual and Overall Reaction Orders
For the reaction 2NO(g) + 2H2(g) → N2(g) + 2H2O(g):
PLAN: We inspect the exponents in the rate law, not the coefficients
of the balanced equation, to find the individual orders. We
add the individual orders to get the overall reaction order.
SOLUTION:
(a) The exponent of [NO] is 2 and the exponent of [O2] is 1, so
the reaction is second order with respect to NO, first
order with respect to O2 and third order overall.
16-18
Sample Problem 2.2
(c) The reaction is first order in H2O2, first order in I-, and
second order overall. The reactant H+ does not appear
in the rate law, so the reaction is zero order with respect to
H+.
16-19
Determining Reaction Orders
16-20
Table 2.2 Initial Rates for the Reaction between A and B
16-21
Finding m, the order with respect to
A:
We compare experiments 1 and 2, where [B] is kept
constant but [A] doubles:
m
Rate 2 k[A]m n [A] 2 m
2 [B] 2 =
[A] 2
=
= m
Rate 1 k[A]m n [A]1
1 [B] 1 [A]1
m
3.50x10-3 mol/L·s 5.00x10-2 mol/L
=
1.75x10 mol/L·s
-3 2.50x10-2 mol/L
16-22
Finding n, the order with respect to B:
We compare experiments 3 and 1, where [A] is kept
constant but [B] doubles:
n
Rate 3 k[A]m n [B] 3 n
3 [B] 3 =
[B] 3
=
= n
Rate 1 k[A]m n [B]1
1 [B] 1 [B]1
n
3.50x10-3 mol/L·s 6.00x10-2 mol/L
=
1.75x10 mol/L·s
-3 3.00x10-2 mol/L
16-23
Table 2.3 Initial Rates for the Reaction between O2 and NO
Initial Reactant
Concentrations (mol/L)
Initial Rate
Experiment (mol/L·s) [O2] [NO]
1 3.21x10-3 1.10x10-2 1.30x10-2
2 6.40x10-3 2.20x10-2 1.30x10-2
3 12.48x10-3 1.10x10-2 2.60x10-2
4 9.60x10-3 3.30x10-2 1.30x10-2
5 28.8x10-3 1.10x10-2 3.90x10-2
16-24
Finding m, the order with respect to O2:
We compare experiments 1 and 2, where [NO] is kept
constant but [O2] doubles:
m n
Rate 2 k[O2] 2 [NO]2 [O2] m2 [O2]2 m
= m n = =
Rate 1 k[O ] [NO] [O ]
m
[O2]1
2 1 2
1
1 m
6.40x10-3 mol/L·s 2.20x10-2 mol/L
=
3.21x10-3mol/L·s 1.10x10-2 mol/L
16-25
Sometimes the exponent is not easy to find by inspection.
In those cases, we solve for m with an equation of the form
a = bm:
log a log 1.99
m= = = 0.993
log b log 2.00
This confirms that the reaction is first order with respect to O2.
16-26
Finding n, the order with respect to NO:
We compare experiments 1 and 3, where [O2] is kept
constant but [NO] doubles:
n
Rate 3 [NO]3 n
= 12.8x10-3 mol/L·s 2.60x10-2 mol/L
=
Rate 1 [NO]1 3.21x10-3mol/L·s 1.30x10-2 mol/L
16-27
Sample Problem 2.3 Determining Reaction Orders from Rate
Data
16-28
Sample Problem 2.3
PLAN: We need to solve the general rate law for m and for n and
then add those orders to get the overall order. We proceed
by taking the ratio of the rate laws for two experiments in
which only the reactant in question changes concentration.
SOLUTION:
To calculate m, the order with respect to NO2, we compare
experiments 1 and 2:
rate 2 k [NO2]m 2[CO]n 2 [NO2] 2 m m
0.080 0.40
= = =
rate 1 k [NO2] 1[CO]
m n
1 [NO2] 1 0.0050 0.10
16 = (4.0)m
so m = 2
16-29
Sample Problem 2.3
so n = 0
16-30
Table 2.4 Units of the Rate Constant k for Several
Overall Reaction Orders
Overall
Reaction Units of k General formula:
Order (t in seconds)
L order-1
0 mol/L·s
(or mol L-1s-1) mol
Units of k =
1 1/s (or s-1) unit of t
2 L/mol·s
(or L mol-1s-1)
3 L2/mol2·s
(or L2 mol-2s-1)
Series of plots of
concentration
vs. time
16-32
Integrated Rate Laws
16-33
Sample Problem 2.5 Determining the Reactant Concentration
after a Given Time
PROBLEM: At 1000oC, cyclobutane (C4H8) decomposes in a first-order
reaction, with the very high rate constant of 87 s-1, to two
molecules of ethylene (C2H4).
(a) If the initial C4H8 concentration is 2.00 M, what is the
concentration after 0.010 s?
(b) What fraction of C4H8 has decomposed in this time?
16-34
Sample Problem 2.5
SOLUTION:
[C4H8 ]t [C4H8 ]t
(a) ln = - kt ln = - (87 s-1)(0.010 s) = - 0.87
[C4H8 ]0 2.00 mol/L
[C4H8 ]t
= e-0.87 = 0.419
2.00 mol/L
16-35
Figure 2.10A Graphical method for finding the reaction
order
from the integrated rate law.
First-order reaction
straight-line form
ln[A]t = -kt +
ln[A]0
A plot of ln [A] vs. time gives a straight line for a first-order reaction.
16-36
Figure 2.10B Graphical method for finding the reaction
order
from the integrated rate law.
Second-order reaction
integrated rate law
1 1
[A] - [A] = kt
t 0
straight-line form
1 1
= kt +
[A]t [A]0
16-37
Figure 2.10C Graphical method for finding the reaction
order
from the integrated rate law.
Zero-order reaction
straight-line form
[A]t = - kt + [A]0
A plot of [A] vs. time gives a straight line for a first-order reaction.
16-38
Figure 2.11 Graphical determination of the reaction order for
the
decomposition of N2O5.
16-39
Reaction Half-life
The half-life (t1/2) for a reaction is the time taken for the
concentration of a reactant to drop to half its initial value.
16-40
Figure 2.12 A plot of [N2O5] vs. time for three reaction half-lives.
t1/2 = ln 2 = 0.693
k k
16-41
Sample Problem 2.7 Determining the Half-Life of a First-Order
Reaction
PROBLEM: Cyclopropane is the smallest cyclic hydrocarbon.
Because its 60° bond angles allow poor orbital overlap,
its bonds are weak. As a result, it is thermally unstable
and rearranges to propene at 1000°C via the following
first- order reaction:
The rate constant is 9.2 s-1, (a) What is the half-life of the
reaction?
(b) How long does it take for the concentration of cyclopropane
to reach one-quarter of the initial value?
PLAN: The reaction is first order, so we find t1/2 using the half-life
equation for a first order reaction. Once we know t1/2 we can
calculate the time taken for the concentration to drop to 0.25
of its initial value.
16-42
Sample Problem 2.7
SOLUTION:
0.693 0.693
(a) t1/2 = = = 0.075 s
k 9.2 s-1
16-43
Half-life Equations
16-44
Table 2.5 An Overview of Zero-Order, First-Order, and
Simple Second-Order Reactions
Zero Order First Order Second Order
Rate law rate = k rate = k[A] rate = k[A]2
Units for k mol/L·s 1/s L/mol·s
Half-life [A]0 ln 2 1
2k k k[A]0
Integrated rate law [A]t = -kt + [A]0 ln[A]t = -kt + ln[A]0 1 1
in straight-line form = kt +
[A] [A]
t
0
1
Plot for straight line [A]t vs. t ln[A]t vs. t
vs.[A]
t
[A]t 0
Slope, y intercept -k, [A]0 -k, ln[A]0 1
k,
16-45
Collision Theory and Concentration
16-46
Figure 2.13 The number of possible collisions is the product,
not the sum, of reactant concentrations.
add another
6 collisions
4 collisions
add another
9 collisions
16-47
Temperature and the Rate Constant
16-48
Figure 2.14 Increase of the rate constant with temperature
for the hydrolysis of an ester.
16-49
Activation Energy
16-50
Figure 2.15 Energy-level diagram for a reaction.
16-51
Temperature and Collision Energy
16-52
Figure 2.16 The effect of temperature on the distribution
of
collision energies.
16-53
Calculating Activation Energy
T
straight-line
If data is available at two different form
temperatures:
k2 Ea
ln =- 1
−
1
k1 R
T2 T1
16-54
Figure 2.17 Graphical determination of the activation energy.
Ea 1
ln k = ln A -
R T
16-55
Sample Problem 2.8 Determining the Energy of
Activation
PROBLEM: The decomposition of hydrogen iodide,
2HI(g) → H2(g) + I2(g), has rate constants of 9.51x10-9
L/mol·s at 500. K and 1.10x10-5 L/mol·s at 600. K.
Find Ea.
PLAN: We are given two rate constants and two temperatures, so
we can use the Arrhenius equation to solve for Ea.
SOLUTION:
-1
E
=- a 1 1 so Ea = -R ln 1 − 1
ln kk21 R − k1
T2 k2 T2
-1
T1 1.10x10-5 L/mol·s T1
Ea = -(8.314 J/mol·K) ln 9.51x10-9 L/mol·s 1 −
1
600.K 500.
= 1.76x105 J/mol = 1.76x102 kJ/mol K
16-56
Molecular Structure and Reaction Rate
16-57
Figure 2.18 The importance of molecular orientation to an
effective collision.
16-58
Transition State Theory
16-59
Figure 2.19 The transition state of the reaction between BrCH3
and OH-.
BrCH3 + OH- → Br- + CH3OH
16-60
Figure 2.20 Depicting the reaction between BrCH3 and OH-.
16-61
Figure 2.21 Reaction energy diagrams and possible transition
states for two reactions.
16-62
Sample Problem 2.9 Drawing Reaction Energy Diagrams and
Transition States
PROBLEM: A key reaction in the upper atmosphere is
O3(g) + O(g) → 2O2(g)
The Ea(fwd) is 19 kJ, and the Hrxn for the reaction as written
is -392 kJ. Draw a reaction energy diagram,
predict a structure for the transition state, and calculate
Ea(rev).
PLAN: The reaction is highly exothermic (Hrxn = -392 kJ), so the
products are much lower in energy than the reactants.
The small Ea(fwd) (19 kJ) means that the energy of the
lies only slightly below that of the transition state. We
reactants
calculate the value of Ea(rev) from the value of H and Ea(fwd).
To predict the transition state structure, we note that one O-O
bond of O3 breaks and a new O-O bond forms.
16-63
Sample Problem 2.9
SOLUTION:
Ea= 19 kJ
411kJ
Energy
2O2
Reaction progress
16-64