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Reaction Rates. Thermodynamically stable: a reaction which has an overall positive energy change (non-spontaneous, endothermic). Reaction Rates. Reaction Rates. Kinetically stable: a reaction that proceeds so slowly that no change is detectable. Reaction Rates.
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Thermodynamically stable: a reaction which has an overall positive energy change (non-spontaneous, endothermic) Reaction Rates
Kinetically stable: a reaction that proceeds so slowly that no change is detectable. Reaction Rates
Some reactions go to completion. That is, it proceeds until one of the reactants is used up and then stops.Most do not. Reaction Rates
Many reactions are reversible. Reactants produce products, while products may decompose back into reactants. A + B AB Reaction Rates
When the rate at which the products form, equals the rate at which the products decompose, the reaction has reached dynamic equilibrium. Reaction Rates
NOTE: chemical equilibrium says nothing about the amount of products produced (some reactions only produce a small amount of product). Why? Reaction Rates
Reversibilty implies that there is always some reactants present, even after products have formed and equilibrium has been established.Why? Reaction Rates
Reaction rates are measured in terms of the appearance of the products, or the disappearance of the reactants.Which do you choose? Reaction Rates
As a reaction proceeds, samples can be taken and the concentrations of the reactants and products determined. Rates are then computed. Reaction Rates
What is concentration? How is it measured? Which units? What would be the units for reaction rates? Reaction Rates
Meaning: rate = conc. of species/time aA + bB --> cC + dD Rate = C]/ct = -A]/at Why is rate, computed by species]/t also divided by the molar coefficient? Reaction Rate
The minus sign is used because concentrations of reactants decrease with time. The concentration will be expressed in molarity; time may be in seconds, years, etc. Reaction Rate
Reaction Rates Concentration vs Time
Reaction Rates Concentration vs Time
Factors: Nature of the reactants, concentration of the reactants, temperature, amount of reactant surface area, and the presence of a catalysis. Reaction Rates
Reactions with bond rearrangements take the longest. Covalent? Ionic reactions proceed almost instantaneously. Nature of Reactants
Collisions must have enough energy to rearrange bonds to form products. Nature of Reactants
Molecules sometimes have to form activated complexes. Activation energy is the energy required to do this. Nature of Reactants
Concentrations: increasing the concentration of a reactant increases the reaction rate. Why? How does pressure effect a reaction? Concentration
How does temperature effect reaction rate? Temperature
Homogeneous reaction: a reaction where all the reactants are in the same phase. Heterogeneous reactions: reactants are in differentphases (interface). Phases
The reaction must take place on the surface of the solid or liquid. How does the amount of exposed surface area affect the rate of the reaction? How can it be increased? Heterogeneous rx
Catalysts: a chemical substance that lowers the activation energy and speeds up a reaction but is not consumed in the reaction. Catalyst
Homogeneous vs heterogeneous catalysts. Activated complex vs surface catalysts. Inhibitors Catalyst
Heterogeneous catalysts: uses adsorption to the surface to speed the production of a product. Catalyst
Homogeneous catalysts: 1. reduce activation energy, 2. assist in bringing together reactants. Catalyst
3. Low activation energy = more successful collisions = faster reaction. Catalyst
Homogeneous catalyst = activated complex Heterogeneous catalysts = surface catalysts. Catalyst
Inhibitors = do not slow reactions, rather they compete for and tie-up reactants. Catalyst
Rate expression / rate constants Reaction mechanisms Rate determining step Rate Expressions
The reaction rate varies directly as the product of the concentrations of the reactants. Rate Expressions
Rate expression: rate = k[reactants]n The rate expression is always determined experimentally. Rate Expressions
The specific rate constant is dependent on the size, speed, and kind of molecules involved in the reaction. Rate Expressions
There is one k for each reaction at a given temperature. Rate Expressions
The exponents of the concentrations determines the ‘order’ of the reaction. Ie. A squared concentration in the expression is considered second order. Rate Expressions
Rate dependence on concentration: single reactant, A: rate = k[A]m; k = rate constant, m = order Two reactants, A, B; rate = k[A]m[B]n, overall order = m+n Rate and Concentration
In general, m and n are usually positive integers. However, they can be 0 or a fraction. Rate and Concentration
Determine m and k from the following rate-conc. data: CH3CHO(g) --> CH4(g) + CO(g); Rate/Concentration
Sample problem Rate/Concentration
Determine m and k from the following rate-conc. data: CH3CHO(g) --> CH4(g) + CO(g) m = 2, k = 2.0 (M.s)-1 Rate/Concentration
First order reactions: ln ([A]o / [A]) = kt [A]o = original conc. of reactant A [A] = conc. of A at any time t. First Order Kinetics
Suppose k = 0.250/s, [A]o = 1.00 M. What is the conc. of A after 10.0s? [A] = 0.0819 M First Order Kinetics
How long does it take to drop to one half its original value? t1/2 = 2.77s First Order Kinetics
Note that, for a first order reaction: t1/2 is independent of the initial conc. It takes just as long to drop from 2.0M to 1.0M as from 1.0M to 0.50M. First Order Kinetics
Note that, for a first order reaction: t1/2 is inversely related to k. If t1/2 is small, then k is large and vice versa. First Order Kinetics
Rate = k; [A] = [A]o - kt. The plot of [A] versus time is linear. Zero Order Kinetics
Rate = k[A]2; 1/[A] - 1/[A]o = kt. The plot of 1/[A] versus time is linear. Second Order Kinetics
A series of reactions may have to take place for a reaction to go to completion. The steps are considered the reaction mechanism. Reaction Mechanisms