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Kinetics

Kinetics. Rates of Reaction. Faster only means faster. It doesn’t mean bigger It doesn’t mean more of the product It only means the rxn is completed faster, the reactants are turned into products in less time. Not a reaction but think about it.

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Kinetics

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  1. Kinetics Rates of Reaction

  2. Faster only means faster • It doesn’t mean bigger • It doesn’t mean more of the product • It only means the rxn is completed faster, the reactants are turned into products in less time

  3. Not a reaction but think about it • Come up with at least 3 ways you can make sugar dissolve faster in tea. • Then, thinking about collisions (even though these are not gases), explain why these things make the sugar dissolve faster?

  4. Collision theory • Particles can’t react until they collide • Collisions must be successful • To be successful they must have enough energy and proper orientation • So, rate depends on: • Energy of particles • Orientation of particles when collide

  5. Activation Energy • Ea = activation energy = minimum energy needed for reaction to occur • Rate of reaction depends on # particles with E ≥ Ea • How could you raise the energy of particles? • Temperature increases the energy of particles • This increases the # particles with E ≥ Ea • This is why rate usually increases with temperature!

  6. Catalyst • A catalyst is something that makes a reaction go faster without being used in the reaction • Catalysts increase rate of rxn by lowering the Ea • So, more particles have E ≥ Ea • Ex: MnO2 and H2O2

  7. Frequency of Collisions • Increasing the frequency of collisions increases the chances of correct orientation • Note: FREQUENCY of collisions, not number of collisions • Frequency of collisions can be increased by: • Increasing concentration of reactants – more particles to collide • For gases – increasing pressure increases frequency of collisions • Increase surface area (by decreasing size of particles)

  8. Factors that affect the rate of a reaction • Temperature • Size of particles reacting – surface area • Concentration of particles reacting • Catalysts • For each of these, describe how and why they can increase the rate of rxn based on the collision theory

  9. Compare reactions • How do the rates compare? • How do the amounts of product compare? dynamicscience.com.au

  10. Representing effect of Temperature • Increased Temperature increases number of molecules with E >Ea • Can show this effect on a diagram • Temperature is a measure of average kinetic • This means some particles have more energy and some have less energy 

  11. Maxwell – Boltzman curve • Area under curve = total # of particles, therefore area must remain constant • When temperature increases curve shifts to the right as more particles have greater energy 

  12. Rate of Reaction • Kinetics is the study of the rates of a reaction • Reaction rates are determined experimentally • Rreactionrates are measured as changes in concentration over time

  13. Baking soda and vinegar • There are 3 things you could measure – what are they? NaHCO3(s)+ CH3COOH(aq)  NaCH3COO (aq)+ CO2 (g)+ H2O (l)

  14. Reaction Rates continued • Always positive value • Rate can be given as the rate of disappearance of reactant or appearance of product • Units of mol/Lx time or M/time • Rate usually decreases eventually as the reactants get used up

  15. Average rate of a reaction • For reaction A → B • rate = - ∆[A] / ∆t or rate = ∆[B] / ∆t • Rate with regard to A is negative because reactant is disappearing • Rate with regard to B is positive because appearing • If reaction was A  2B then B would be forming twice as fast as A • But the rate of the overall rxn is the same!

  16. Coefficients and reaction rates • The rate of a reaction is always the same, but it can be written using any reactant or product • Ex: aA + bB → cC + dD • rate = -1/a ( ∆[A] / ∆t ) = -1/b ( ∆[B] / ∆t ) = 1/c ( ∆[C] / ∆t ) = 1/d ( ∆[D] / ∆t )

  17. Example #1 • H2 (g) + 2 BrCl (g) → Br2 (g) + 2HCl (g) • H2 (g) being used at ½ the rate of HCl being made • How do the rates of BrCl and Br2 compare? • Rate = -∆[ H2]=- ½ (∆[ BrCl] )=∆[ Br2] =½ (-∆[ HCl]) ∆t ∆t ∆t ∆t

  18. Example #2 • For the equation 2N2O5 (g) → 4 NO2(g) + O2(g) • At a certain time in the rxn, the rate of formation of NO2 = 0.0072 M/sec • Find the rate of change of O2, rate of change of N2O5 and the rate of rxn.

  19. Answer Ex. #2 • Given: Rate ∆NO2 = 0.0072 M/sec • From equation ¼ ∆[NO2] = ∆[O2] = - ½ ∆[N2O5] ∆t ∆t ∆t • Rate ∆[ O2] = ( ¼ )0.0072 M/sec = 0.0018 M/sec • Rate ∆[ N2O5] = (- ½ )0.0072 M/sec = -0.0036 M/sec • Rate rxn = 0.0018 M/sec • Can get rxn rate using any term

  20. Experimentally Determining Reaction Rates • Can measure any property that is different between reactants and products – best if the change is large • Ex: • If gas is produced – measure change in pressure and relate to concentration using ideal gas law • If let gas escape, can use change in mass

  21. Measuring reaction rates • Ways to measure a reaction rate include: • Changes in pH • Changes in color (Use a colorimeter) • Conductivity • Volume of a gas • Pressure of a gas • Changes in mass…

  22. Determining Rate from Graphs • Time on x-axis • Mass, volume of gas, mass of gas lost, concentration on y-axis • Determine if graph showing reactants used up or products made • The rate usually indicated by slope of tangent to initial point on graph

  23. Example simplechemconcepts.com

  24. On graphs looking for: • How rate changes – steepness of curve • How much product is made or reactant is used – final point on graph academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu

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