1 / 23

Chemical Kinetics : rate of a chemical reaction

Before a chemical reaction can take place the molecules involved must be raised to a state of higher potential energy. They are then said to be activated or to form an activated complex. Chemical Kinetics : rate of a chemical reaction. van’t Hoff eq. for temperature coefficient of equilibrium

denna
Download Presentation

Chemical Kinetics : rate of a chemical reaction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Before a chemical reaction can take place the molecules involved must be raised to a state of higher potential energy. They are then said to be activated or to form an activated complex. Chemical Kinetics : rate of a chemical reaction

  2. van’t Hoff eq. for temperature coefficient of equilibrium • constant is 2) mass-action law relates equilibrium constant to the ratio of rate constants In 1889 Arrhenius said: Hence a reasonable eq. for the variation of rate constant with temperature is Where Ea is the activation energy of the reaction

  3. where ln A is the constant of integration. Hence If Ea does not depend on temperature, we can integrate this last eq. to obtain This is the famous Arrhenius eq. for the rate constant. According to Arrhenius, molecules must acquire a certain critical energy Ea before they can react. The Boltzmann factor is the fraction of molecules that manages to obtain the necessary energy. This interpretation is still held to be essentially correct.

  4. The rate of any chemical reaction can be formulated in terms of its activated complex. The rate of reaction is the number of activated complexes passing per second over the top of the potential energy barrier. This rate is equal to the concentration of activated complexes times the average velocity with which a complex moves across to the product side. Henry Eyring (1901-1981) Calculation of conc. of activated complexes is greatly simplified if we assume that they are in equil. with the reactants. This equil. can then be treated by means of thermodynamics or statistical mechanics.

  5. Consider this equilibrium: equil. constant for the formation of the complex is the conc. of complexes is thus Transition State Theory according to transition state theory, the rate of reaction is The rate of passage over the barrier is equal to the frequency with which the complex flies apart into the products.

  6. The frequency is equal to where is the average energy of the vibration leading to decomposition. Since by hypothesis this is a thoroughly excited vibration at temperature T, it has its classical energy and hence frequency The complex flies apart when one of its vibrations becomes a translation, and what was formerly one of the bonds holding the complex together becomes simply the line of centers between separating fragments. The reaction rate is therefore with rate constant

  7. The activated complex is similar to a normal stable molecule in every respect save one. The sole difference is that one of its vibrational degrees of freedom is missing, having been transformed into the translation along the reaction coordinate. Instead of 3N-6 vibrational modes, it has 3N-7 modes (non-linear case). This is the general expression given by transition state theory for the rate constant of any elementary reaction. To be precise, the expression for k2 should be multiplied by a factor called the transmission coefficient, which is the probability that the complex will not recross the transition state and dissociate back into products. In basic TST,

  8. This is the difference between the free energy of the activated complex and that of the reactants, when all are in their standard states. We can formulate k2 in thermodynamic terms by introducing the standard free energy change The quantities are called the free energy of activation, the heat of activation, and the entropy of activation. The heat of activation is almost equivalent to the experimental energy of activation Ea, except for a PV term which is negligible for solid or liquid systems.

  9. Before Chemical can correct for a wrong choice of transition state this way as well

  10. where/what is the transition state? • what is the reaction coordinate? Schematic representation of the free energy landscape with two stable, attractive wells separated by a transition state ridge, which connects the highest free energy points of all possible paths connecting the reactant and product states. The dotted line represents a new trajectory that was branched of at point p from an old trajectory (bold line) and surpasses the TS ridge at a lower point. challenges for computational modeling

  11. Chemical

  12. Before Chemical

  13. Before Chemical

  14. Before Chemical

  15. Before Chemical

  16. Before Chemical

  17. Before Chemical

  18. what is the reaction coordinate? Example of a complicated reaction coordinate: aqueous proton transfer reaction

  19. Before Chemical

  20. Transition path sampling

  21. Chemical

  22. Chemical

  23. Chemical

More Related