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Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

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Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions
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Page 1: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Chemical KineticsA Study of the Rates of

Reactions

Page 2: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Consider a reaction in which

D A + BHow “fast” does the

reactant, D, disappear?

Page 3: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Concentration of D over Time

Time(s) [D] mol/ L

0 0.2000

10 0.1904

20 0.1812

30 0.1725

40 0.1641

50 0.1562

60 0.1487

70 0.1415

80 0.1347

90 0.1282

100 0.1220

This is the raw data collected during theexperiment

Start your analysis by graphing [D] v. Time

Page 4: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Concentration of D over Time

0.0500

0.0700

0.0900

0.1100

0.1300

0.1500

0.1700

0.1900

0.2100

0 50 100 150 200 250

Time(s)

[D]

mo

l/L

Page 5: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Concentration of D over Time y = -0.0006x + 0.1848

R2 = 0.9737

0.0500

0.0700

0.0900

0.1100

0.1300

0.1500

0.1700

0.1900

0.2100

0 50 100 150 200 250

Time(s)

[D]

mo

l/L

Page 6: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

The data do not forma straight line.

The R2 value only hasone “9”.

This reaction is NOT zero order! How do we knowthis? The plot is NOT a straight line!

R2= 0.9737

Page 7: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Time(s) [D] mol/ L Ln[D] mol/ L

0 0.2000 -1.609

10 0.1904 -1.659

20 0.1812 -1.708

30 0.1725 -1.758

40 0.1641 -1.807

50 0.1562 -1.856

60 0.1487 -1.906

70 0.1415 -1.955

80 0.1347 -2.005

90 0.1282 -2.054

100 0.1220 -2.103

Next, convert your raw data to natural logsand graph ln[D] v. time

Page 8: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

What is the difference between a natural logand a common log?

•Natural logs use a base value of “e”, 2.71 andis designated with the symbol “ln”

•Common logs use a base value of “10” and isdesignated with the symbol “log”

•The conversion between natural and commonlogs is: log x = 2.303 ln x

Page 9: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Natural Log of [D] over Time

-3.000

-2.800

-2.600

-2.400

-2.200

-2.000

-1.800

-1.600

0 50 100 150 200 250

Time(s)

Ln

[D

] m

ol/L

Page 10: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Natural Log of [D] over Time y = -0.0049x - 1.6094

R2 = 1

-3.000

-2.800

-2.600

-2.400

-2.200

-2.000

-1.800

-1.600

0 50 100 150 200 250

Time(s)

Ln

[D

] m

ol/L

Page 11: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

This reaction isfirst order.

Ln [D

]

time

The R2 value is 1.0.

The data DO form a straight line.

Plot of ln [D] vs time

Page 12: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Normally, when you get a straight lineyou stop making graphs.

For teaching purposes, let’s go aheadand look at the third kind of graph:

1/[D] v. time

Page 13: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Inverse [D] over time

4.000

6.000

8.000

10.000

12.000

14.000

16.000

18.000

0 50 100 150 200 250

time(s)

1/[

D]

L/m

ol

Page 14: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Inverse [D] over time y = 0.0477x + 3.9571

R2 = 0.9737

4.000

6.000

8.000

10.000

12.000

14.000

16.000

18.000

0 50 100 150 200 250

time(s)

1/[

D]

L/m

ol

Page 15: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Reaction Rates

average rate

• the rate over a specific time interval

instantaneous rate

• the rate for an infinitely small interval

Page 16: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Rate Law

Reaction rate = k [A]m [B]n

where m => order with respect to A

n => order with respect to B

overall order = m + n

Page 17: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Order of Reaction

• exponent of the concentration for a reactant that implies the number of molecules of that species involved in the rate determining step

• first order, exponent equals one

• second order, exponent equals two

Page 18: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Rates are studied for the first few moments of the chemical reaction.

Method of Initial Rates

0.0000

0.0020

0.0040

0.0060

0.0080

0.0100

0.0120

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

Time (s)

Co

nce

ntr

atio

n

Page 19: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Concentrations are changed and the change in rate is calculated.

Method of Initial Rates

0.0000

0.0020

0.0040

0.0060

0.0080

0.0100

0.0120

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

Time (s)

Co

nce

ntr

atio

n

Page 20: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

The initial rate is found by calculating theAVERAGE RATE over the first few moments of the reaction.

Method of Initial Rates

0.0000

0.0020

0.0040

0.0060

0.0080

0.0100

0.0120

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

Time (s)

Co

nce

ntr

atio

n

Page 21: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

We know that the average rates will be different because the slope of each line is different.

Method of Initial Rates

0.0000

0.0020

0.0040

0.0060

0.0080

0.0100

0.0120

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

Time (s)

Co

nce

ntr

atio

n

Page 22: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

When several initial concentrations have been tried, we can generate a table of data that looks like this:

2R P

[R], M

0.1

0.2

0.4 1.1x 10-4

Initial Rate (mol/Ls)

2.7 x 10-5

5.4 x 10-5

Page 23: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

What would the basic rate law look like for this reaction?

2R P

Rate = k [R]m

The equation says that the concentration of R is proportional to the rate of reaction.

[R]m : rate

Page 24: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

We need to solve for m and k. We start by solving for m.

Basic Rate Law: Rate = k [R]m

Chemical Reaction: 2R P

[R], M

0.1

0.2

0.4 1.1x 10-4

Initial Rate (mol/Ls)

2.7 x 10-5

5.4 x 10-5

Page 25: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Solving for musing the Method of

Initial Rates

Rate = k [R]m

Page 26: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Basic Rate Law: Rate = k [R]m

Chemical Reaction: 2R P

By what factor did the concentration increase from experiment 1 to experiment 2? It doubled.

Experiment 2 = 0.2 = 2Experiment 1 0.1

[R], M

0.1

0.2

0.4 1.1x 10-4

Initial Rate (mol/Ls)

2.7 x 10-5

5.4 x 10-5

Page 27: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Basic Rate Law: Rate = k [R]m

This is a 1:1 relationship between concentrationand rate.

How can we use the Basic Rate Law to guide us tothis relationship?

[R]m : rate The rate goes up when the concentration goes up.

2m = 2 The concentration doubled and the rate doubled.

m = 1 Solve for m

Thus, the rate law is: Rate = k [R]1 or Rate = k [R]

Page 28: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Let’s review some basic math:

20 =

21 =

22 =

23 =

24 =

4

2

1

8

16

3m = 9

3m = 3

4m = 16

5m = 125

456m = 1

m = 2

m = 1

m = 2

m = 3

m = 0

Page 29: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Solving for kusing the Method

of Initial Rates

Rate = k [R]m

Page 30: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

The Rate Law is : Rate = k [R]

Now, we can solve for k by inserting the information in the table into the Rate Law.

Rate = k [R]

2.7 x 10-5 M/s = k [0.1 M]

k = 2.7 x 10-4 s-1

[R], M

0.1

0.2

0.4 1.1x 10-4

Initial Rate (mol/Ls)

2.7 x 10-5

5.4 x 10-5

Page 31: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Experiment 1: k = 2.7 x 10-4 s-1

Experiment 2: k = 2.7 x 10-4 s-1

Experiment 3: k = 2.7 x 10-4 s-1

The value for k, the proportionality constant, is the same for all three experiment.

It is a good idea to check at least two experimentsto see that k is the same. If you made a mistakefinding the rate law, the k’s will differ!

[R], M

0.1

0.2

0.4 1.1x 10-4

Initial Rate (mol/Ls)

2.7 x 10-5

5.4 x 10-5

Page 32: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

We have found

1. The rate law for the reaction RP:

Rate = k [R]

2. The value of the proportionality constant, k:

k = 2.7 x 10-4

Page 33: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Now we can write the rate law for the reaction

RP

Rate = (2.7 x 10-4)[R]

Final form for the Rate Law for this example:

Page 34: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Average Rates

Chemical Kinetics of NO2

Page 35: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Chemical Kinetics of NO2

Page 36: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Decomposition of NO2

0.0000

0.0020

0.0040

0.0060

0.0080

0.0100

0.0120

0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450

Time(s)

Con

cent

ratio

n (m

ole/

L)

NO2

NO

O2

Page 37: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Disappearance of NO2

0.0000

0.0020

0.0040

0.0060

0.0080

0.0100

0.0120

0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450

Time (s)

[NO

2]

Page 38: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Rate = [NO2] = 0.0031 mol/L - 0.0100 mol/L = -1.73 x 10-5 mol/L s time 400 s - 0 s

Why is the rate negative?

How do we fix this problem?

Rate = - [NO2] = - (0.0031 mol/L - 0.0100 mol/L) = 1.73 x 10-5 mol/L s

time 400 s - 0 s

We add a negative sign when a chemical is disappearing!

Page 39: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

For all reactants:

Rate = - [reactant] time

For all products:

Rate = [product] D time

Use a negative signfor reactant rates!

Omit the negative signfor product rates!

Page 40: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Disappearance of NO2

0.0000

0.0020

0.0040

0.0060

0.0080

0.0100

0.0120

0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450

Time (s)

[NO

2]

Page 41: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Advantages of the Methodof Initial Rate:

1. Useful when a reaction is reversible. The reverse reaction won’t significantly contribute to the first few moments of the reaction.

2. Useful for very fast or very slow reactions.

Page 42: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Advantages of the Integrated Rate Method:

1. Useful for moderate length reaction.2. Doesn’t require multiple experiments to determine the order of the reaction.

Page 43: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Common Uses of the Method of Initial Rates:

1. To determine the order of the reaction.2. Find the rate constant, k .

Page 44: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Common Uses of the Method of Integrated Rate Laws:1. To determine the order of the reaction.2. Find the rate constant, k .

3. To determine the concentration at a certain time.4. To determine at what time a certain concentration will be reached.

Page 45: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Integrated Rate Laws

A ---> products

rate = - ([A]/t) = k[A]m

average rate

rate = - (d[A]/dt) = k[A]m

instantaneous rate

Page 46: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.
Page 47: Chemical Kinetics A Study of the Rates of Reactions.

Integrated Rate Law:A reaction is followed for an extended period of time.

Method of Initial RatesA reaction is followed for only thefirst few moments of the reaction.


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