1 / 6

Reaction Kinetics: Factors Affecting Rates and Rate-Limiting Steps

This lecture covers reaction rates and factors that affect them, including concentration, temperature, and catalysts. It also discusses reaction mechanisms, including elementary and multistep reactions, and rate-limiting steps. Examples of rate laws and overall reaction equations are provided.

nmoore
Download Presentation

Reaction Kinetics: Factors Affecting Rates and Rate-Limiting Steps

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. CHE1031Lecture 10: Reaction kinetics • Lecture 10 topics Brown chapter 14 • 1. Reaction rates • Factors that effect reaction rates 14.1 • Visualizing rates & units 14.2 • Average reaction rates • Instantaneous reaction rates • Stoichiometry & reaction rates • 2. Concentration & reaction rates 14.3 • Rate laws • Reaction orders • 3. Change in concentration with time 14.4 • First- & second-order reactions • Half-life • 4. Temperature & reaction rate 14.5 • Collision, orientation & Ea • 5. Reaction mechanisms 14.6 • Elementary • Multistep • 6. Catalysis` 14.7

  2. Reaction mechanisms Elementary vs. multistep reactions Rate-limiting steps

  3. Reaction mechanisms Reaction mechanism – describe the details by which a chemical rxntakes place. There are a series of basic & common mechanisms. Elementary mechanisms: single-step reactions Multistep reactions: require several steps, or reactions to reach completion Molecularity? Uni-, bi-, or termolecular describe reactions of 1, 2 or 3 molecules. = = Unimolecular: H3C – N = C  H3C – C = N Bimolecular: NO + O3  NO2 + O2 Two-step reaction: (1) NO2 + NO2  NO3 + NO (2) NO3 + CO  NO2 + CO2 sum NO2 + CO  NO + CO2 Molecules that don’t appear in thesummed (overall) reaction areintermediates. p. 581 - 2

  4. Elementary reactions & rate laws The relationship is quite simple as you can see here: p. 583 - 4

  5. Rate-limiting steps When chemical reactions require more than one step, their overallrate is often limited by the slowest of the steps. So this slowest stop is called the rate-limiting step because it limits the overall rate of reaction. Step 1: NO2 + NO2  NO3 + NO (slow) Step 2: NO3 + CO  NO2 + CO2 (fast) Overall: NO2 + CO  NO + CO2 k1 k2 >> k1 k2 What is the rate law of the overall reaction? • Because step 1 is much slower than step 2, it is rate-limiting. • The rate of the overall reaction is equal to the rate of the slow step (1). • Step 1 is bimolecular, so • rate = k1[NO2]2 p. 584 - 5

  6. Rate-limiting examples Nitrous oxide decomposes by a two-step mechanism. N2O  N2 + O (slow) N2O + O  N2 + O2 (fast) Write the equation for the overall reaction. Write the rate law for the overall reaction. a) 2N2O  2N2 + O2 b) Rate = k[N2O]2 Ozone reacts with nitrogen dioxide by a two-step mechanism: Step 1: O3 + NO2  NO3 + O2 Step 2: NO3 + NO2  N2O5 Overall: O3 + 2NO2  N2O5 + O2 Overall experimental rate law is: rate = k[O3][NO2]. Which step is slower? Step 1 is the slow step, since it is used in the rate law for the overall reaction. p. 584 - 5

More Related