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Chemical Kinetics

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Chemical Kinetics. Chapter 14. 2NO ( g ) + O 2 ( g ) 2NO 2 ( g ). Elementary step:. NO + NO N 2 O 2. +. Elementary step:. N 2 O 2 + O 2 2NO 2. Overall reaction:. 2NO + O 2 2NO 2. Reaction Mechanisms. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Chemical Kinetics Chapter 14
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Page 1: Chemical Kinetics

Chemical KineticsChapter 14

Page 2: Chemical Kinetics

Reaction Mechanisms

The overall progress of a chemical reaction can be represented at the molecular level by a series of simple elementary steps or elementary reactions

The sequence of elementary steps that leads to product formation is the reaction mechanism.

2NO (g) + O2 (g) 2NO2 (g)

N2O2 is detected during the reaction!

Elementary step: NO + NO N2O2

Elementary step: N2O2 + O2 2NO2

Overall reaction: 2NO + O2 2NO2

+

Page 3: Chemical Kinetics

Elementary step: NO + NO N2O2

Elementary step: N2O2 + O2 2NO2

Overall reaction: 2NO + O2 2NO2

+

Intermediates - species that appear in a reaction mechanism but not in the overall balanced equation

An intermediate is always formed in an early elementary step and consumed in a later elementary step.

Molecularity of a reaction - the number of molecules reacting in an elementary step.

• Unimolecular reaction – elementary step with 1 molecule

• Bimolecular reaction – elementary step with 2 molecules

• Termolecular reaction – elementary step with 3 molecules

Page 4: Chemical Kinetics

Unimolecular reaction A products rate = k [A]

Bimolecular reaction A + B products rate = k [A][B]

Bimolecular reaction A + A products rate = k [A]2

Rate Laws and Elementary Steps

Writing plausible reaction mechanisms:

• The sum of the elementary steps must give the overall balanced equation for the reaction.

• The rate-determining step should predict the same rate law that is determined experimentally.

Rate-determining step - the slowest step in the sequence of steps leading to product formation.

Page 5: Chemical Kinetics

The experimental rate law for the reaction between NO2 and CO to produce NO and CO2 is rate = k[NO2]2. The reaction is believed to occur via two steps:

Step 1: NO2 + NO2 NO + NO3

Step 2: NO3 + CO NO2 + CO2

What is the equation for the overall reaction?

NO2+ CO NO + CO2

What is the intermediate?NO3

What can you say about the relative rates of steps 1 and 2?

rate = k[NO2]2 is the rate law for step 1 so step 1 must be slower than step 2

Page 6: Chemical Kinetics

Catalyst - a substance that increases the rate of a chemical reaction without itself being consumed

k = A • exp( -Ea/RT ) Ea k

uncatalyzed catalyzed

ratecatalyzed > rateuncatalyzed

Ea < Ea'

Fig 14.17

Page 7: Chemical Kinetics

Heterogeneous catalysis - the reactants and the catalysts are in different phases.

Homogeneous catalysis - reactants and the catalysts are dispersed in a single phase, usually liquid.

• Haber synthesis of ammonia

• Ostwald process for the production of nitric acid

• Catalytic converters

• Acid catalysis

• Base catalysis

Page 8: Chemical Kinetics

N2 (g) + 3H2 (g) 2NH3 (g)Fe/Al2O3/K2O

catalyst

Haber ProcessFig 14.18

Page 9: Chemical Kinetics

Ostwald Process for Making Nitirc Acid

Hot Pt wire over NH3 solutionPt-Rh catalysts used

in Ostwald process

4NH3 (g) + 5O2 (g) 4NO (g) + 6H2O (g)Pt catalyst

2NO (g) + O2 (g) 2NO2 (g)

2NO2 (g) + H2O (l) HNO2 (aq) + HNO3 (aq)

Fig 14.19

Fig on pg 438

Page 10: Chemical Kinetics

Catalytic Converters

CO + Unburned Hydrocarbons + O2 CO2 + H2Ocatalytic

converter

2NO + 2NO2 2N2 + 3O2

catalyticconverter

Fig 14.20

Fig 14.21

Platinum, palladium, rhodium

Page 11: Chemical Kinetics

Enzyme CatalysisFig 14.22

Fig 14.23

glucose

hexokinasehexokinase

Page 12: Chemical Kinetics

Basic reaction steps in enzyme catalysis

E + S ⇌ ES (fast)

ES → P + E (slow)k

uncatalyzedenzyme

catalyzed

Fig 14.24

rate = Δ[P]Δt rate = k [ES]

Page 13: Chemical Kinetics

Fig 14.25 Plot of rate of product formation vssubstrate concentration

First order

Zero order

rate k [S]


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