Reaction kinetics
Factors which affect the rate of a chemical reaction
1 Concentration of reactants
2 Pressure
3 Temperature
4 Physical state of reactants
5 catalysts
Decomposition of hydrogen peroxide
[H2O2}]
Time
Rate = gradient = conc example units are mol s-1 timeNow we find gradient at various concentrations and plot rate vs concentration
rate
concentration
a) In this case the rate concentration. When rate is directly proportional to the concentration we call this 1st order with respect to the concentration of the reactant we are monitoring
rate
concentration
b) In this case the rate is independent of the concentration. We call this zero order with respect to the reactant we are monitoring
rate
concentration
c) We call this one 2nd order with respect to the reactant we are monitoring
For a) where the rate is proportional to the conc
rate [H2O2]
or rate = k [H2O2] where k is called the rate constant
and the above equation is called the rate equation
We could write this as rate = k [H2O2]1 but the superscript is always assumed to be 1 if no other number is present.
This is the number that is referred to in the expression 1st order
Lets suppose we now have a reaction involving 2 reactants
A + B products
Rate will depend on both [A] and [B] The rate equation is
rate = k[A]x [B]y
x and y are called the order with respect to A and B
X and y may be 0,1,2 (very rarely 3)
If the order is 0 the the rate does not depend on the concentration of that reactant
e.g for the reaction between A and B previously.
If order w.r.t A = 1 and order w.r.t B = 0
The rate equation will be
Rate =k [A]1[B]0 any number to the power of 0 = 1 Rate equation becomes
Rate = k [A]
The overall order of a reaction is the sum of all the superscripts
So for the reaction with a rate equation as follows
Rate = k[A]1][B]2
The overall order is 3
It is important to remember that no information about the order or the rate of a reaction can be found from an equation. All the kinetic data must be found by experiment
Definitions
The order of reaction is the number of concentration terms in the experimentally determined rate equation.
The rate of a reaction is proportional to the concentration and the rate constant is the proportionality constant.
In order to find the order w.r.t. individual reactants a series of experiments must be performed.
e.g. for the reaction
A + B P
We need to
1) Keep A the same and change B
2) Keep B the same and change A
Initial conc A mol/l
Initial conc B mol/l
Initial rate mol/L/h
2 x 10-3 3 x 10-3 3 x 10-3
2 x 10-3 6 x 10-3 1.2 x 10-2
4 x 10-3 6 x 10-3 2.4 x 10-2
Lets look at A first. When B is kept the same and A is doubled the rate doubles.
rate [A]1
i.e. order w.r.t A = 1
When A kept the same and B doubled
The rate increases x 4 (i.e 22)
Rate [B]2
i.e. order w.r.t B = 2
Overall order = 3
our rate equation then is rate = k [A][B]2
As k is a constant it will be the same for any of the 3 experiments so we can use any experiment and put in the values of [A] [B] and initial rate to find k.
k = rate k = 3.0 x 10-3
[A][B]2 (2 x 10-3)(3.0 x 10-3)2
= 1.67 x 105
What are the units?
mol/L/h = mol-2L2 h-1
(mol/L)3
Although we write equations for reactions with only one step many reactions have more than one step
i.e. for the overall reaction
A + B C
The actual procedure could be
Step 1 A intermediate
Step 2 intermediate + B C
The first step is often the slowest step and is called the rate determining step
In any reaction the slowest step (usually the first step) is the rate determining step (r.d.s)
The order of reaction is the number of molecules or atoms taking part in the r.d.s
So in the previous example the order w.r.t. A would be 1 and the overall order would also be 1. the rate depends on the first step so [B] has no effect on the rate.
For reaction with the following rate equation
Rate = k[A][B]Order w.r.t A = 1Order w.r.t B = 1 1 molecule A and 1 molecule B take part in the r.d.s
For a reaction with the following rate equation Rate = k[A]2B]0
This would be a 2 step reactionStep 1 A + A XStep 2 X + B products