Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated...

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Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1. Reaction Rates 2. Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3. Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4. Integrated Rate Laws & Concentration/Time Problems 5. Collision Theory of Reactions a. Reaction Mechanisms b. Predicting Rate Laws c. Temperature Dependence of the Rate Constant (Arrhenius) 6. Catalysis

Transcript of Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated...

Page 1: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics

1. Reaction Rates2. Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated3. Experimental Determination of the Rate Law4. Integrated Rate Laws & Concentration/Time Problems5. Collision Theory of Reactions

a. Reaction Mechanismsb. Predicting Rate Lawsc. Temperature Dependence of the Rate Constant

(Arrhenius)

6. Catalysis

Page 2: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

As the reaction proceeds, it gets slower because the rate depends on [NO2].

Page 3: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Figure 12.1

Page 4: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Example 1:Determine the rate law and the value of the rateconstant for the following reaction.

2 NO + Br2 2 NOBr

Experiment [NO]0 [Br2]0 Initial Rate (mole/L s)

1 1.1 x 10-5 1.2 x 10-5 0.37

2 1.9 x 10-5 1.3 x 10-5 0.69

3 3.5 x 10-5 1.2 x 10-5 1.2

4 4.0 x 10-5 3.0 x 10-5 3.4

Page 5: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Example 2:Determine the rate law and the value of the rate constant for the following reaction in whichOH- is a catalyst.

OCl- + I- OI- + Cl-

Experiment [OCl-]0

(mole/L)

[I-]0

(mole/L)

[OH-]0

(mole/L)

Rate(mole/L s)

1 .0040 .0020 1.00 4.8x10-4

2 .0020 .0040 1.00 5.0x10-4

3 .0020 .0020 1.00 2.4x10-4

4 .0020 .0020 0.50 4.6x10-4

5 .0020 .0020 0.25 9.4x10-4

Page 6: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Example 3:Time (s) [H2O2]

(mole/L)

0.000 1.000

120.000 0.910

300.000 0.780

600.000 0.590

1200.000 0.370

1800.000 0.220

2400.000 0.130

3000.000 0.082

3600.000 0.050

The concentration of H2O2 was monitored over time for the following reaction at 25°C:

H2O2 (aq) H2 (g) + O2 (g)

Find the rate law and the value of the rate constant for this reaction at 25°C.

Page 7: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Example 4:

The decomposition of N2O5 to NO2 and O2 is

first order with a rate constant of

4.80 x 10-4 /s at 45°C.

(a) If the initial concentration of N2O5 is 1.65 x 10-2 mole/L, what is the concentration after 825 s?

(b) How long would it take for the concentration of N2O5 to decrease to 1.00 x 10-2 mole/L if its initial concentration wa that given in (a)?

Page 8: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Example 5:

For the following decomposition reaction,AB A + BRate = k[AB]2

k = 0.20 L/mole sHow long will it take for [AB] to reach one third of its original value of 1.50 M? Whatis [AB] after 10.0 seconds?

Page 9: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Zero Order Half Life

t1/2 = [A]0 / 2k

Note that this half life decreases as the reaction proceeds.

There is less reactant to Consume and it runs at thesame rate so it takes less

time.

Time (s) [A]

0 1.6

2.0 .80

3.0 .40

3.5 .20

3.75 .10

3.88 .050

Page 10: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

First Order Half Lifet1/2 = 0.693 / k

The first order half life is

constantfor a particular reaction and temperature.

As the initial concentration decreases, the decrease in rate is compensated for by less reactant to consume.

Time (s) [A]

0 1.6

24.0 .80

48.0 .40

72.0 .20

96.0 .10

120.0 .050

Page 11: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Second Order Half Life

t1/2 = 1 / [A]0 k

Note that this half life increases as the reaction proceeds.

The rate decreases so strongly with concentration that it still takes longer to use up half ofthe reactant even though the amount of reactant consumed isless for each half life.

Time (s) [A]

0 1.6

10.2 .80

30.6 .40

71.4 .20

153 .10

Page 12: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.
Page 13: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Example 6:

A decomposition reaction has a rate constant of 0.0012 yr-1.

a) What is the half life of this reaction?

b) How long does it take for the concentration of the reactant to reach 12.5% of its original value?

Page 14: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Example 7:

It took 143 s for 50.0% of a particular substance to decompose. If the initial concentration was 0.060 M and the decomposition reaction follows second order kinetics, what is the value for the rate constant?

Page 15: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Example 8:

For the reaction A products, successive half-lives are observed to be 10.0, 20.0, and 40.0 min for an experiment in which [A]0=0.10M.

Calculate the concentration of A at the following times.

a) 80.0 minb) 30.0 min

Page 16: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Example 9:(Book #34)

O + NO2 NO + O2

[NO2] in large excess,

1.0x1013molecules/cm3

a) Find the order of the reaction with respect to [O].

b) Reaction is known to be first order in [NO2]. Find the value of k.

Time (s) [O] atoms/cm3

0 5.0x109

1.0x10-2 1.9x109

2.0x10-2 6.8x108

3.0x10-2 2.5x108

Page 17: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Example 10:

Consider the following mechanism for the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide catalyzed by I-.

Step 1: H2O2 + I- H2O + IO- ; fast equilibrium

Step 2: IO- + H2O2 H2O + O2 + I- ; slow

a) Write a balanced equation for the overall reaction.b) List any catalysts.c) List any intermediates.d) Write the rate law for the overall reaction.

Page 18: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Example 11:

Consider the following mechanism for the production of phosgene:

Step 1: Cl2 (g) 2 Cl (g); fast equilibriumStep 2: Cl (g) + CO (g) COCl (g); fast equilibriumStep 3: COCl (g) + Cl2 (g) COCl2 (g) + Cl (g); slow

Step 4: 2 Cl (g) Cl2 (g); fast

a) Write a balanced equation for the overall reaction.b) List any catalysts.c) List any intermediates.d) Write the rate law for the overall reaction.

Page 19: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Figure 12.11: 2BrNO 2 NO + Br2

Page 20: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Figure 12.13:

Page 21: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Example 12:

The activation energy of the following reaction is 3.5 kJ/mole and the change in enthalpy is -66.6 kJ/mole. Calculate the activation energy of the reverse reaction. OH + HCl H2O + Cl

Hint: Sketch the reaction energy diagram.

Page 22: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Example 13:

For the reaction A2 + B2 2 AB, the activation energy of the forward reaction is 125 kJ/mole and that of the reverse reaction is 85 kJ/mole. Assuming the reaction occurs in one step:a) Draw a reaction energy diagram.b) Calculate H for the reaction.c) Sketch a possible transition state.

Page 23: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Figure 12.2: Collisions with E > Ea at two temperatures.

Page 24: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Example 14:

The isomerization reaction:CH3NC CH3CN

has an activation energy of 161 kJ/mole.If the rate constant at 600K is 0.41/s, what is it at 1000K?

Page 25: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Example 15:

The rate constant of a reaction is 4.50x10-5 L/mol•s at 195°C and 3.20 x 10-3 L/mol•s at 258°C. What is the activation energy of this reaction?

Page 26: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Catalysts Work by Lowering Ea:They provide a different mechanism!

Page 27: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

More collisions result in reaction when Ea is lower.

Page 28: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Homogeneous Catalysis

In the stratosphere, NO catalyzes the

destruction of ozone, O3.

NO (g) + O3 (g) NO2 (g) + O2 (g)

O (g) + NO2 (g) NO (g) + O2 (g)

Overall:

O3 (g) + O (g) 2 O2 (g)

Page 29: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

C2H4 + H2 C2H6

with a metal catalyst

a. reactantsb. adsorptionc. migration/reactiond. desorption

Heterogeneous Catalysis

Page 30: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Enzymes are Catalysts

Page 31: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Enzymes are Catalysts

Page 32: Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics 1.Reaction Rates 2.Rate Laws: Differential and Integrated 3.Experimental Determination of the Rate Law 4.Integrated Rate.

Enzymes are Catalysts