1 / 30

Chapter 17 Reaction Kinetics

Chapter 17 Reaction Kinetics. 17-1 The Reaction Process. Can you remember the first time you ever made a friend?. How did you meet? . What had to happen before the friendship could begin?. Eye Contact. Mutual Friend. Accidentally Bumped into each other. Collision Theory.

keon
Download Presentation

Chapter 17 Reaction Kinetics

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. Chapter 17Reaction Kinetics 17-1 The Reaction Process

  2. Can you remember the first time you ever made a friend? How did you meet? What had to happen before the friendship could begin? Eye Contact Mutual Friend Accidentally Bumped into each other

  3. Collision Theory • In order for a reaction to occur particles must collide in: • A specific orientation and • with enough energy

  4. Activation Energy • The amount of energy required for a reaction to occur

  5. Activation Energy • Activation energy - the amount of energy the particles must have when they collide to force a reaction to occur. Activation Energy Reactants Products

  6. ∆H will be negative since energy has left the system Reaction Pathways The products have less energy than the reactants. The rxn released energy (heat) = exothermic

  7. ∆H will be positive since energy has been added to the system Reaction Pathways The products have more energy than the reactants. The rxn absorbed energy (heat) = endothermic

  8. Practice • Draw and label the energy diagram for a reaction in which ΔE = 30 kJ/mol, Ea = 40 kJ/mol. Place reactants at energy level zero. Indicate determined values of ΔEforward, ΔEreverse & Ea’

  9. Reaction Mechanisms • Step-by-step sequence of rxns in order to obtain a final product Proposed Mechanism for Ozone Depletion via Free Chlorine Atoms Created by Decomposition of CFCs Step 1) Cl + O3 → ClO + O2 Step 2) 2 ClO → ClOOCl Step 3) ClOOCl → ClOO + Cl Step 4) ClOO → Cl + O2

  10. Mechanisms overall rxn Intermediates

  11. Mechanisms overall rxn Rate Determining Step Slow Fast Fast Fast

  12. Catalysts vs. Intermediates overall rxn Catalysts appear 1st as a reactant and then as a product during a mechanism. Intermediates appear 1st as a product and then as a reactant during a mechanism.

  13. Chapter 17Reaction Kinetics 17-2 Reaction Rate

  14. How can we increase the rate of a reaction? • Increase Surface Area • Increase Temperature • Increase Concentration • Increase in Pressure • Add a Catalyst

  15. Surface Area • Increase the surface area allows for a greater chance for effective collision

  16. Temperature • An increase in temperature will cause particles to move at a higher velocity resulting in more effective collisions

  17. Concentration • An increase in concentration will also cause an increase in the chance that effective collisions will occur

  18. Pressure • Increasing the pressure of a gas system will cause more frequent collisions

  19. Catalysts • Adding a catalyst lowers the amount of activation energy required

  20. Catalysts Reactants Catalyst

  21. Rate Laws • An equation that relates the rxn rate and the concentration of reactants Rate Determining Step Slow Rate = k[HBr][O2]

  22. Rate Laws • If no mechanism is given, then… 2H2 + 2NO  N2 + 2H2O Rate = k[H2]2[NO]2

  23. Rate Orders • 0, 1st and 2nd order rates • Order is dependent upon what will yield a straight line 2nd order 0 order 1/[reactants] [reactants] 1st order ln [reactants]

  24. Rate Orders For Individual Components: • 1st order: reaction rate is directly proportional to the concentration of that reactant • 2nd order: reaction rate is directly proportional to the square of that reactant • 0 order: rate is not dependant on the concentration of that reactant, as long as it is present.

  25. Rate Orders For Overall Order: • Overall reaction orders is equal to the sum of the reactant orders. • Always determined experimentally!

  26. Calculating for k A + 2B  C Rate = k[A][B]2 What is the value of k, the rate constant?

  27. Calculating for k Rate = k[A][B]2 2.0 x 10-4 = k[0.20][0.20]2 2.0 x 10-4 = k(0.008) k = 2.50 x 10-2 min-1 M-2

  28. Practice 1. In a study of the following reaction: 2Mn2O7(aq) → 4Mn(s) + 7O2(g) When the manganese heptoxide concentration was changed from 7.5 x 10-5 M to 1.5 x 10-4 M, the rate increased from 1.2 x 10-4 to 4.8 x 10-4. Write the rate law for the reaction. 2. For the reaction: A + B → C When the initial concentration of A was doubled from 0.100 M to 0.200 M, the rate changed from 4.0 x 10-5 to 16.0 x 10-5. Write the rate law & determine the rate constant for this reaction. Rate = k[Mn2O7]2 Rate = k[A]2 Constant = 4.0 x 10-3 M/s

  29. More Practice 3. The following reaction is first order: CH3NC(g) → CH3CN(g) The rate of this reaction is 1.3 x 10-4 M/s when the reactant concentration is 0.040 M. Predict the rate when [CH3NC] = 0.025. 4. The following reaction is first order: (CH2)3(g) → CH2CHCH3(g) What change in reaction rate would you expect if the pressure of the reactant is doubled? New Rate = 8.1 x 10-5M/s An increase by a factor of 2

  30. Even More Practice 5. The rate law for a single step reaction that forms one product, C is R = k[A][B]2. Write the balanced reaction of A & B to form C. 6. The rate law of a reaction is found to be R = k[X]3. By what factor does the rate increase if the concentration of X is tripled? 7. The rate of reaction, involving 2 reactants, X & Z, is found to double when the concentration of X is doubled, and to quadruple when the concentration of Z is doubled. Write the rate law for this reaction. A + 2B → C The rate will increase by a factor of 27 R = k[X][Z]2

More Related