CHM271 - Chapter 5 Chemical Kinetics (Part 1-3)
CHM271 - Chapter 5 Chemical Kinetics (Part 1-3)
CHM271 - Chapter 5 Chemical Kinetics (Part 1-3)
CHEMICAL KINETICS
CHAPTER 5
3
Chemical Kinetics or Reaction Kinetics
[ x]
rate =
t
Unit = concentration
time
= mole / liter or mol dm-3
second second
= mol L-1 s-1 5
= M s -1
• During a chemical reaction, the reactants are consumed while
the products are formed.
• When the reactants transform to products;
• The concentration of reactants decreases with time.
• The concentration of products increases with time.
1
Rate α
time
6
For a chemical reaction A → B,
A (REACTANT) → B (PRODUCT)
The rate of reaction is
• The decrease in reactant concentration , [A] per
unit time
• The increase of product concentration, [B] per unit
time
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A B
time
[A]
rate = -
t
[B]
rate =
t
8
Consider a general reaction :
[ p] d [ p]
rate = = 9
t dt
Let’s consider the rates for chemical reaction
Rate of disappearance of NO =
Rate of disappearance of O2 =
10
Br2 (aq) + HCOOH (aq) 2Br- (aq) + 2H+ (aq) + CO2 (g)
slope of
tangent
slope of
tangent
slope of
tangent
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EXAMPLE 1
Consider the reversible gas-phase reaction between
ethylene and ozone at 303 K.
C2 H 4 ( g ) + O3 ( g ) ⎯⎯
→ C2 H 4O( g ) + O2 ( g )
40.0 1.40x10-5
50.0 1.23x10-5
60.0 1.10x10-5
The concentration of O3 vs. time during its reaction with C2H4
The average rate over the first
60.0 s of the reaction.
[O3 ]
Rate = −
t
- (1.10x10 -5 - 3.2 10 -5 )M
Rate =
(60 - 0)s
Rate = 3.50 10 −7 Ms −1
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What is the Collision Theory ?
During a reaction, the particles of the reactants must
collide with each other, for bond breaking and then bond
formation to produce product.
Effective collisions?
Activation energy?
✓ The activation energy, Ea is the minimum energy that the
reactant particles must have in order to react. 18
COLLISION THEORY
1. The reactant molecules must collide with one another for a
reaction to occur.
2. NOT ALL collisions between reactant molecules will result in a
chemical reaction.
3. The reactant molecules must collide with sufficient energy and
the effective fraction of collision has energy greater than the Ea.
4. The molecules must collide in an orientation that can lead to
rearrangement of the atoms.
http://www.kscience.co.uk/animations/collision.htm
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WHAT FACTORS AFFECT THE RATE OF
REACTION?
• Increased temperature
• Increase concentration of dissolved
reactants
• Increased pressure of gaseous reactants
• Increased surface area of solid reactants
• Use of a catalyst
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EFFECT OF TEMPERATURE ON
RATE OF REACTION
Why does increased temperature increase the rate of reaction?
The higher the temperature, the faster the reaction thus the
higher its rate of reaction. In many reactions, a rise in
temperature of 10°C causes the rate of reaction to
approximately double.
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TEMPERATURE AND BATTERIES
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EFFECT OF CONCENTRATION ON RATE OF
REACTION
• Why does increased concentration increase the rate of reaction?
• At a higher concentration, there are more particles in the same
amount of space. This means that the particles are more likely to
collide and therefore more likely to react.
• The higher the concentration of a dissolved reactant, the faster
the rate of a reaction
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lower pressure higher pressure
EFFECT OF SURFACE AREA ON RATE OF
REACTION
• Any reaction involving a solid can only take place on the surface
of the solid.
• If the solid is split into several pieces, the surface area increases.
What effect will this have on rate of reaction?
• This means that there is an increased area for the reactant
particles to collide with.
• The smaller the pieces, the larger the surface area thus more
collisions and a greater possibility of reaction.
Ea with
catalyst
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reaction (time)
5.3 RATE LAW AND ORDER OF
REACTION
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DIFFERENTIAL RATE EQUATION
aA + bB cC
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EXAMPLE 2
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EXAMPLE 3
2O3 ( g ) → 3O2 ( g )
Write the differential rate equation for the above equation.
Solution:
1 d [O3 ] 1 d [O2 ]
rate = − =
2 dt 3 dt
OR
d [O3 ] 2 d [O2 ]
rate = − =
dt 3 dt
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THE RATE LAW
The rate law expresses the relationship of the rate of a reaction to
the rate constant and the concentrations of the reactants raised to
some powers.
Consider the following general equation:
aA + bB cC + dD
Rate = k [A]x[B]y
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EXAMPLE 4
rate = k [Br2]
rate
k= = rate constant
[Br2]
= 3.50 x 10-3 s-1
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F2 (g) + 2ClO2 (g) → 2FClO2 (g)
rate = k [F2]x[ClO2]y
rate = k [F2][ClO2]
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• Rate laws are always determined experimentally unless you have
been told a rate-limiting or slow step.
rate = k [F2][ClO2]
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EXAMPLE 5
Determine the rate law and calculate the rate constant for the following
reaction from the following data:
S2O82- (aq) + 3I- (aq) → 2SO42- (aq) + I3- (aq)
Initial
Experiment [S2O82-] [I-]
Rate (M/s) rate = k [S2O82-]x[I-]y
1 0.08 0.034 2.2 x 10-4 y=1
[S2O8 ][I ]
2- -
(0.08 M)(0.034 M)
THE ORDER OF REACTION
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For a reaction with a single reactant A
First order reaction:
- Rate is directly proportional to [A]
rate = k[A]
Rate = k [ A ]x [B ]y
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