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ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

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Key Concept: Barriers To Reaction Are Caused By Uphill reactions Bond stretching and distortion. Orbital distortion due to Pauli repulsions. Quantum effects. Special reactivity of excited states. 3
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ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1
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Page 1: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

ChE 553 Lecture 24Theory Of Activation

Barriers

1

Page 2: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

New Topic• Why do we get activation barriers• How can one manipulate activation

barriers

2

Page 3: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Key Concept: Barriers To Reaction Are Caused By

• Uphill reactions• Bond stretching and distortion.• Orbital distortion due to Pauli

repulsions.• Quantum effects.• Special reactivity of excited states.

3

Page 4: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Plan for Today• Describe each of the effects

• Start to develop models

4

Page 5: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Qualitative Picture Of Free Energy Changes During A Reaction

5

Free

ene

rgy,

kca

l/mol

e of

bro

min

e at

oms

-50

0

50

1/2Br2

Br

H+HBr

Br+2HBr

1/2 Br2+2HBr

Reaction Progress

Gas Phase

+H2

+Br2 H2 + Br2 2HBr

Barrier since uphill

Extra barrier due to orbital distortions

Page 6: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

This Case Has Two Key Effects

• Uphill reactions• Orbital distortion due to Pauli repulsions• Bond stretching and distortion• Quantum effects• Special reactivity of excited states

6

Page 7: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Uphill Reactions Obvious

7

Free

ene

rgy,

kca

l/mol

e of

bro

min

e at

oms

-50

0

50

1/2Br2

Br

H+HBr

Br+2HBr

1/2 Br2+2HBr

Reaction Progress

Gas Phase

+H2

+Br2 H2 + Br2 2HBr

Barrier since uphill

Extra barrier due to orbital distortions

Dominant cause of barriers in bond scission (SN1) reactions

Page 8: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Bond Stretching And Distortion

• Bonds bend and stretch as reactions occur

• Bond distortion costs energy – leads to barrier

8

H-NC H\NC NC-H

Dominant cause of barriers in unimolecular reactions

Page 9: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Orbital Distortion• Orbitals distort as reactions occur due

to Pauli repulsions• Leads to barriers

9

Dominant cause of barriers in exothermic atom and ligand transfer (SN2) reactions

Page 10: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Orbital Notation

10

Positive orbital

Negative orbital

Page 11: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Orbital Distortions D + H2 HD+ H

11

Reactants ComeTogether,H-H BondDistorts

TransitionState

Separated Reactants

HD

C-H bond

Rea

ctio

n P

rogr

ess

ProductsD

Incoming DeuteriumPushes H-H Bond Off Of Hydrogen

HydrogenMoves Out Of H-HBond and IntoD-H Bond

D

H

HD

H

D

H

H

Notice that the shading of the bond is preserved

Page 12: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Orbital Distortions H + C2H6 H2+ C2H5

12

Reactants ComeTogether,C-H BondDistorts

TransitionState

HCC

Separated Reactants

H

C-H bond

Rea

ctio

n P

rogr

ess

Products

2

H

HH

Incoming HydrogenPushes CH Bond Off Of Methyl-Hydrogen

HH

H

Methyl HydrogenMoves Out Of C-HBond and IntoH-H Bond

H

H

H

CH CH3 2CH CH3 3

Page 13: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Orbital Distortions H + C2H6 CH3+ CH4

13

Reactants ComeTogether,NonbondingLobe Distorts

TransitionState

H CC

Separated Reactants

H CH CH 33

Non-bonding LobesC-C bond

Rea

ctio

n P

rogr

ess

Bonds Break:

New BondsForm

Products

CH3 4CH

ReactantsBegin ToSeparate

NonbondingLobe PushsInto C-C Bond

Page 14: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Quantum Effects: Orbital Symmetry Conservation

• Sign of orbital, electron spin does not change during a concerted reaction

14

Reactants ComeTogether,NonbondingLobe Distorts

TransitionState

H CC

Separated Reactants

H CH CH 33

Non-bonding LobesC-C bond

Rea

ctio

n P

rogr

ess

Bonds Break:

New BondsForm

Products

CH3 4CH

ReactantsBegin ToSeparate

NonbondingLobe PushsInto C-C Bond

Page 15: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Consider H2 + D2 2 HD

15

H2

D2

HD HD

Page 16: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Can Reaction Occur?

16

No Net Force To Distort Orbitals

Net Force, but product is HD + H + D (i.e. two atoms)Such a reaction is 104 kcal/mole endothermic

Page 17: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Conservation Of Orbital Symmetry

• Quantum effect leading to activation barriers

• Orbital symmetry/sign conserved during concerted reactions– Sometimes bonds must break before new

bonds can form

17

Page 18: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Special Reactivity Of Excited States

• Related Quantum Effect: sometimes only excited states can lead easily to products

3 H + N + X NH3 + X• Ground state of N has only 1 unpaired

electron – not reactive to NH3 formation• Excited state of N has 3 unpaired electrons

– much more reactive

18

Page 19: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Surfaces Can Change Each Form Of Barrier

• Change free energy of intermediates• Stretch bonds• Modify electron flow• Ameliorate quantum limitations (one

electron in adsorbate replaced by electron from solid)

• Stabilize excited sites

19

Page 20: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Polanyi’s Model:Consider a proton transfer reaction (assume

bond stretching controls):

20

Ener

gy

E a

rBH

B RHrBH

rRH

Figure 10.2 The energy changes which occur when a proton H is transferred between a conjugate base B and a reactant R. The solid line is the energy of the B-H bond while the dotted line is the energy of the H-R bond.

Page 21: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Effects Of Changes

21

Ener

gy

E a

rBH

B RHr

BHr

RH

Figure 10.3 A diagram illustrating how an upward displacement of the B-H curve affects the activation energy when the B-R distance is fixed.

Ener

gyrBH

B RHrBH rRH

Reactants

Products

Figure 10.4 A diagram illustrating a case where the activation energy is zero.

Page 22: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Derivation Of Polayni Equation

22

Ener

gy

rAB

Ea

ActualPotential

LinearFit

Line 1

Line 2r1 r2

BCAB

Figure 10.6 A linear approximation to the Polanyi diagram used to derive equation (10.11).

  

E E + Sl r - r (reactants)1 Reactant 1 ABC 1

E E + Sl r - r (products)2 product 2 2 ABC

(10.9)

(10.10)

Page 23: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Solving For The Intersection Of The Two Lines

23

E =Sl Sl

Sl Slr r +

SlSl Sl

Ha1 2

1 22

1

1 2r

1

(10.11)

Page 24: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Put In Standard Form

Defining

Yields

24

ESl Sl

Sl Slr ra

o 1 2

1 22 1

P

1

1 2

SlSl Sl

E = E + Ha ao

P r

(10.12) (10.13)

(10.14)

Page 25: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Case Where Polayni Works (Over A limited data set)

25

-20 -15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 20

-20 -15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 20

0

5

10

15

20

25

, kcal/molerH

, kca

l/mol

eaE

Figure 10.7 A plot of the activation barriers for the reaction R + H R RH + R with R, R = H, CH3, OH plotted as a function of the heat of reaction Hr.

Page 26: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Equation Does Not Work Over Wide Range Of H

26

-2.4 -4.8 -7.2 -9.6

-6

-4

-2

0

2Lo

g kac

, kcal/molerH

MarcusEquation

Figure 10.11 A Polanyi plot for the enolization of NO2(C6H4)O(CH2)2COCH3. Data of Hupke and Wu[1977]. Note Ln (kac) is proportional to Ea.

Page 27: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Equation Does Not Work Over A Wide Data Set

27

-30 -20 -10 0 10 20 300

-30 -20 -10 0 10 20 300

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

, kcal/molerH

, kca

l/mol

eaE

Figure 10.10 A Polanyi relationship for a series of reactions of the form RH + R R + HR. Data from Roberts and Steel[1994].

Page 28: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Seminov Approximation: Use Multiple Lines

28

-40 -20 0 20 400

0

10

20

30

40

Heat Of Reaction, kcal/mole

Act

ivat

ion

Bar

rier,

kcal

/mol

e Seminov

-100 -50 0 50 1000-20

0

20

40

60

80

100

Heat Of Reaction, kcal/moleA

ctiv

atio

n B

arrie

r, kc

al/m

ole Seminov

Figure 11.11 A comparison of the activation energies of a number of hydrogen transfer reactions to those predicted by the Seminov relationships, equations (11.33) and (11.34)

 

Figure 11.12 A comparison of the activation energies of 482 hydrogen transfer reactions to those predicted by the Seminov relationships, over a wider range of energies.

 

Page 29: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Key Prediction Stronger Bonds Are Harder To Break

29

Ener

gy

rAB

Weak Bond

rAB

EaEa

Bond E

nergyStrong Bond

Figure 10.8 A schematic of the curve crossing during the destruction of a weak bond and a strong one for the reaction AB + C A + BC.

Page 30: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Experiments Do Not Follow Predicted Trend

30

50 60 70 80 90 100 110 12030

35

40

45

50

55

60

65

70

75

, kca

l/mol

eaE

Predicted Trend

Experimental Trend

Figure 10.9 The activation barrier for the reaction X- +CH3X XCH3 +

X-. The numbers are from the calculations of Glukhoustev, Pross and Radam[1995].

Page 31: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Summary: Barriers To Reaction Are Caused By

• Uphill reactions– Dominates for many gas phase SN1 reactions

• Bond stretching and distortion– Dominates for unimolecular reactions

• Orbital distortion due to Pauli repulsions• Quantum effects• Special reactivity of excited states

31

Page 32: ChE 553 Lecture 24 Theory Of Activation Barriers 1.

Need Models To Quantify Ideas

• Polanyi’s model– Bond stretching dominates– Ignore Pauli repulsions, quantum effects– Linearize energy vs bond stretch

• Ea varies linearly with heat of reaction– Only fair approximation to data

32


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