Learning Unit 2 Chemical Kinetics 2023 2

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CHEMICAL KINETICS

Presented by:
Mr Sehloho
Department of Biotechnology & Chemistry

www.vut.ac.za
Chemical Kinetics
What are chemical kinetics?
• Is the area of chemistry concerned with reaction
rates and the sequence of steps by which reaction
occur.
• In chemical industry, profitability of processes
requires fast reaction.
Chemical Kinetics: The Rates of Chemical
Reactions
Thermodynamics – does a reaction take place?
Kinetics – how fast does a reaction proceed?
Chemical Kinetics will now provide information
about the reactants and products.

Reactants Products
This gives us information on how a reaction occurs
Chemical Kinetics
• Besides information about the speed at which
reactions occur, kinetics also sheds light on the
reaction mechanism (exactly how the reaction
occurs).
• The speed of a chemical reaction is called its
reaction rate.
• The rate of a reaction is a measure of how fast the
reaction makes products or uses reactants.
Chemical Kinetics
• The rate of a reaction is defined either as the
increase in the concentration of a product(s) per
unit time or the decrease in the concentration of a
reactant(s) per unit time uses reactants.

• The ability to control the speed of a chemical


reaction is important.
Reaction Rates

• Rate is how much a quantity changes in a given


period of time.
• The speed you drive your car is a rate—the distance
your car travels (kilometers) in a given period of
time (1 hour).
• So, the rate of your car has units of km/hr.
Reaction Rates

Rates of reactions can be determined by


monitoring the change in concentration of
either reactants or products as a function of
time t.
[A] = concentration of reactant A
Reaction Rates
• For the reaction A → B there are two ways of measuring
rate:
(1) the speed at which the reactants disappear
(2) the speed at which the products appear
• We want to measure the reactants as soon as they are mixed.
• The most useful (and general) way of measuring the rate of
the reaction is in terms of change in concentration per unit
time…
Rate = ∆[A]/∆t
Units for Rate = M/s
Where Molarity (M) = moles/Liter
Reaction Rates
• Reaction rate is the change in the concentration of a
reactant or a product with time (M/s).

∆[A] ∆[B]
rate = - rate =
∆t ∆t
∆[A] = change in concentration of A over
time period ∆ t
[A] decreases with time, ∆[A] is negative.

∆[B] = change in concentration of B over


time period ∆ t
Factors that Affect the Reaction Rate Constant

1.Temperature: At higher temperatures, reactant molecules have more


kinetic energy, move faster, and collide more often and with greater energy
• Collision Theory: When two chemicals react with each other,
sufficient energy is needed for the reaction to take place.
• Kinetic Theory: Increasing temperature means the molecules move
faster.
2.Concentrations of reactants
• As the concentration of reactants increases,
so does the likelihood that reactant molecules will collide.
3.Catalysts
• Speed up reactions by lowering activation energy
4.Surface area of a solid reactant
• more area for reactants to be in contact
5.Pressure of gaseous reactants or products
• Increased number of collisions
Reaction Rates
• Looking at the following reaction for reaction
rates…
2N2O5(g) → 4NO2(g) + O2(g)
• Changes in concentrations of the reactants and/or
products is inversely proportional to their
stoichiometric proportions.
• This means that the rate of the reaction could be
written like this

• Rate = −½ ∆ [N2O5]/∆t = ¼ ∆[NO2]/∆t =


∆[O2]/∆t
note the negative sign on the rate of [N2O5]
General Reaction Rates
• General reaction rate is equal to the rate of products
consumption of a reactants or formation of a
product divide by the coefficients in the balanced
chemical equations.

• In general, for a reaction that looks like


aA + bB→ cC + dD

The General reaction rate is

Rate = −1 ∆[A] = −1 ∆[B] = 1 ∆[C] = 1 ∆[D]


a ∆t b ∆t c ∆t d ∆t
Types of Rates
• Initial Rates
Rates measured at the beginning of the reaction, which is
dependent on the initial concentrations of reactants.
• Instantaneous Rates
Rates measured at any point during the reaction.
• Average Rates
An overall rate measured over a period or time interval.
• Lets look at worked example 13.1 and Do
practice 13.1
Rate Law and Reaction order
• The rate law of a reaction is the mathematical
relationship between the rate of the reaction and the
concentrations of the reactants and homogeneous
catalysts as well.
• The rate law must be determined experimentally!
• The rate of a reaction is directly proportional to the
concentration of each reactant raised to a power.
Rate Law and Reaction order

• Rates of reactions increase as concentrations increase since


there are more collisions occurring between reactants.

• The overall concentration dependence of reaction rate is


given in a rate law or rate expression.
Rate Law and Reaction order
• For the reaction aA + bB → products
• The general rate law for a reaction will be
Rate = k [A]m [B]n
- [A] & [B] represent the reactants.
- The exponents m and n are called “reaction
orders”.
- The proportionality constant k is called the rate
constant.
- The overall reaction order is the sum of the
reaction orders: m+n
Reaction Orders
Can be zero, positive integer or fraction
Order Name Rate Law
0 zerothrate = k[A]0 = k
1 first rate = k[A]
2 second rate = k[A]2
0.5 one-half rate = k[A]1/2
1.5 three-half rate = k[A]3/2
0.667 two-thirds rate = k[A]2/3
Rate Law and Reaction order
• The rate law for the reaction
2 NO(g) + O2(g) → 2 NO2(g)
is Rate = k[NO]2[O2].
The reaction is
second order with respect to [NO],
first order with respect to [O2],
and third order overall.
Examples

• Let’s consider the following examples:


1. Worked example 13.2 and
2. lets do PRACTICE problem 13.3
and
3. Apply 13.4
• Consider the following reaction:
NH4+(aq) + NO2-(aq) → N2(g) + 2H2O(l)
• Let’s say that the following observations from
several experiments were made…
• as [NH4+] doubles the rate doubles with [NO2-] constant.
• as [NO2-] doubles the rate doubles with [NH4+] constant.

• The rate of this reaction would be expressed as….


Rate = k[NH4+][NO2-]
• The reaction is said to be “first order” with respect to
[NH4+] and “first order” with respect to [NO2-].
• But the overall order of the reaction is said to be “second
order.”
• Reaction rates come from experiment data, not
stoichiometry!
• Compare Experiments 1 and 2:
when [NH4+] doubles, the initial rate doubles.
• Likewise, compare Experiments 5 and 6:
when [NO2-] doubles, the initial rate doubles.
Experimental determination of
Rate Law
• This reaction is
First-order in [NH4+]
First-order in [NO2−]
• The overall reaction order can be found by adding
the exponents on the reactants in the rate law.
• This reaction is second-order overall.
This equation is called the rate law, and k is the rate
constant.
Examples
• Look at worked example 13.3 and 13.4
• Do the following problems
1. Practice 13.5
2. Apply 13.6 and
3. Practice 13.7
Integrated Rate Law
• Rate law is an equation that tells how a reaction rate
depends on reactant concentration.
• We are interested on how the reactants and products
concentration vary with time.
• Rate laws can be integrated using calculus to
another form called integrated rate law, which are
Conc- time equations for calculating the
concentration of reactants that remain at any time (t)
• OR Calculating the time required for the initial
concentration of reactant to drop to a certain
level.
Integrated Rate Law
• Graphical method to derive the rate law
of a reaction:
• Consider a reaction with single reactant:
A → Products
• If the reaction is zero-order w.r.t. [A],
• Then,
- [A]
Rate = =k
t
Integrated rate law: Zeroth- order reaction

- [A]
Rate = =k
t

That is, d[A] = -kdt and by integrating it, we get


[A]t = [A]0 - kt;
[A]0 is the concentration of A at initial time (t0) and [A]t is
the concentration at anytime (t)
A plot of [A]t versus t yields a straight line with k = -
slope.
Graph of Zeroth Order Reactions
• Plot of [A]t versus t:

slope = -k

[A]t

• Study example 13.5 and attempt practice 13.9


Integrated rate law: 1st order reaction

• If the reaction: A → Products is a first order


reaction, then
- [A]
Rate = = k[A]
t
• Using Calculus to integrate the rate law
[A]t
• Which yields: ln [A]0 = - kt; ln[A]t = ln[A]0 - kt

• And a plot of ln[A]t versus t will yield a straight


line with slope = -k and y-intercept = ln[A]0
Graph of 1st Order Reactions
• Plot of ln[A]t versus t:

• slope = -k

• ln[A]t

• t
Examples
• Study worked examples 13.6 and 13.7
• Do the following problems
1. Practice 13.11
2. Practice 13.13
Half-Life of a 1st order Reaction
• Half life (t1/2 )is the time required for a reactant
concentration to drop to one-half of its initial value
• If the reaction: A → Products is a first order
reaction,
[A]t
ln = - kt; ln[A]t = ln[A]0 - kt
[A]0
• The t1/2 of a reaction: t1/2 = 0.693/k;
• The t1/2 of the first order reaction is calculated from
the rate constant (k)
• Study examples 13.8 and do practice 13.15
Integrated rate law: 2nd order reaction

• 2nd order reaction is one whose rate depends either


on the concentration of a single reactant raised to
the 2nd power or two different reactants each raised
to the first power.
• For a reaction with single reactant:
• A → Products
• Rate of consumption of A is given by
• rate = - ∆[A]/ ∆ t = k[A]2
Integrated rate law: 2nd order reaction

• Using calculus to convert rate law to integrated rate


law
1 1
= kt +
[A]t [A]0
• Y = mx + c
We can calculate the conc. of A at any time if the initial
concentration of A is known.
• A plot of 1/[A]t versus t will yield a straight line
with slope = k and y-intercept = 1/[A]0
Graph of 2nd Order Reactions
• Plot of 1/[A]t versus time:

• slope = k
1
[ R]t

• time
Half-Life of a 2nd order Reaction

• For second order reaction, half-life, t1/2 = 1/k[A]0;


• The time required for [A] to drop to one-half of its
initial concentration depends on both the rate
constant and the initial concentration

• Carefully study worked example 13.9 and


attempt practice 13.17
Factors that affect reaction rates

• The rate of a reaction depends on both reactants


concentration and value of the rate constant
• Other factor is temperature, i.e, the rate of reaction
increases with increasing temperature. As a rule of
thumb, reaction rates tend to double when the
temperature is increased by 10 oC.
• Think of the food in the freezer (last longer and
spoil as the T increases.
• Another factor is Activation Energy (Ea )
Activation Energy
• There is a minimum amount of energy required for a
reaction: the activation energy, Ea.
• Just as a ball cannot get over a hill if it does not roll up the
hill with enough energy, a reaction cannot occur unless the
molecules possess sufficient energy to get over the activation
energy barrier.
Activation Energy
• Molecules must possess a minimum amount of
energy to react. Why?
• In order to form products, bonds must be broken in the
reactants. Bond breakage requires energy.
• Molecules moving too slowly, with too little kinetic
energy, don’t react when they collide.
• Activation energy, Ea, is the minimum energy
required to initiate a chemical reaction.
− Ea will vary with the reaction.
Activation Energy
• The activation energy, Ea , is the difference in
energy between reactants, and the transition state.
• The rate depends on Ea. If the “hill” is taller, the
reaction rate is slower. If the “hill” is shorter the
rate is faster.
• Note that if a forward reaction is exothermic then
the reverse reaction is endothermic and vise versa
• From kinetic molecular theory, we know that as temperature
increases, the total kinetic energy increases and the number
of molecules with energy greater than Ea increases.
• So as long as the temperature is high enough, the reaction
can make it “over the hill” and proceed.
The activation energy (Ea) is the minimum amount of energy required to
initiate a chemical reaction.

• For A + B C+D
Exothermic Rxn Endothermic Rxn
Energy Diagrams

(a)Activation energy (Ea) for the forward reaction 50 kJ/mol 300 kJ/mol
(b)Activation energy (Ea) for the reverse reaction 150 kJ/mol 100 kJ/mol
(c) Delta H -100 kJ/mol +200 kJ/mol
Arrhenius Equation
Svante Arrhenius developed a mathematical
relationship between k and Ea:

where A is the frequency factor, a number that


represents the likelihood that collisions would occur
with the proper orientation for reaction.
Arrhenius Equation
Examples
• Look at worked problem 13.11
• Do Practice problem 13.21
catalyst
• A catalyst is a substance that increases the rate of a
chemical reaction without itself being consumed.
• There are two types of catalyst:
Heterogeneous--one that is present in a different
phase as the reacting molecules.
Homogeneous-- one that is present in the same phase
as the reacting molecules.
• Study Table 13.6 Some Heterogeneous
Catalysts Used in Commercially Important
Reactions.
THANK YOU

A ndrie s P ot g ie t e r Blv d. Vande rbijlpark , 1900, Sout h Africa | T 098 008 8900 | E e nquirie s @ v ut . a c. z a

www.vut.ac.za

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