+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

Date post: 08-May-2017
Category:
Upload: nurul-nadia-saffari
View: 217 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
43
H o m o g e n e o u s a n d h e t e r o g e n e o u s r e a c t i o n s 1 System arbitrarily defined part of the universe Phase — a part of system which is uniform in chemical composition and physical state Homogeneous system — a system that consists of a single phase Heterogeneous system a system that consists of two or more phases
Transcript
Page 1: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

H o m o g e n e o u s a n d h e t e r o g e n e o u s r e a c t i o n s 1

System — arbitrarily defined part of the universe

Phase — a part of system which is uniform in chemical composition and physical state

Homogeneous system — a system that consists of a single phase

Heterogeneous system — a system that consists of two or more phases

Page 2: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

H o m o g e n e o u s a n d h e t e r o g e n e o u s r e a c t i o n s 2

Page 3: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

R a t e o f c h e m i c a l r e a c t i o n 3

v = Δn/(V • Δt) Δc = Δn / V v = Δc/Δt

Homogeneous reactions

Rate of homogeneous reaction — the amount of a substance consumed (or produced) in the course of the reaction in one unit of volume per unit of time; or the change of the amount concentration of a substance per unit of time

Page 4: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

R a t e o f c h e m i c a l r e a c t i o n 4

Example 1. The amounts of a substance formed per second in the flasks above are 1 and 2 mol, respectively. Compare ν1 and ν2.

V1 = 1 L V2 = 2L

Page 5: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

R a t e o f c h e m i c a l r e a c t i o n 5

Example 2. In the first flask, 1.8 g H2O was formed in 1 second. In the second flask 8.1 g HBr was formed in 2 seconds. Compare ν1 and ν2.

V1 = 1 L V2 = 2L

Page 6: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

R a t e o f c h e m i c a l r e a c t i o n 6

v = Δn / (S • Δt)

Heterogeneous reactions

Rate of heterogeneous reaction — the amount of substance consumed (or produced) in the course of the reaction on one unit of the phase surface per unit of time

Page 7: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

R a t e o f c h e m i c a l r e a c t i o n 7

Example 3. Hydrochloric acid was divided equally between two beakers. One piece of iron was placed into the first beaker; two exactly the same pieces of iron were placed into the second beaker. Compare: a) initial v1 and v2; b) c1(HCl) and c2(HCl) several minutes later; c) v1 and v2 at that moment.

Page 8: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

R a t e o f c h e m i c a l r e a c t i o n 8

Page 9: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

A v e r a g e a n d i n s t a n t a n e o u s r a t e 9

A → B

Page 10: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

A v e r a g e a n d i n s t a n t a n e o u s r a t e 10

νavr = (c2–c1)/Δt = Δca/Δt

νinst = Δc/Δt = (c'2–c1)/Δt =

Δci/Δt = tg α

If t→0 then c'2→c2,

Δci→Δca, and νavr→νinst

Page 11: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

S t o i c h i o m e t r y a n d t h e r e a c t i o n r a t e 11

Example: 2 NO2 → N2O4

c1, mol/L 0.5 0.0 t1 = 0 s

Δc, mol/L –0.2 +0.1 Δt = 1 s

c2, mol/L 0.3 0.1 t2 = 1 s

Reaction rate should be always positive, so:

ν(NO2) = –Δc(NO2)/Δt = 0.2/1 = 0.2

ν(N2O4) = Δc(N2O4)/Δt = 0.1/1 = 0.1

Page 12: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

S t o i c h i o m e t r y a n d t h e r e a c t i o n r a t e 12

aA + bB → cC + dD

νavr = –(1/a) · νA = –(1/b) · νB = (1/c) · νC = (1/d) · νD

Page 13: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

S t o i c h i o m e t r y a n d t h e r e a c t i o n r a t e 13

"General" rate of reaction — the rate defined as above, i. e. νavr or νinst (without index).

Rate of disappearance (consumption) — usually measured for reactants (in a forward process). For example, νA is the rate of the decrease in concentration of reactant A.

Rate of appearance (formation*) — usually measured for products (in a forward reaction). For example, νD is the rate of the increase in concentration of the product D.

Page 14: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

M e c h a n i s m s o f c h e m i c a l r e a c t i o n s 14

The reaction energy landscape:

A → B A → [X] → B

E

A

B

transition state E

A

B

transition state 1

Xtransition state 2

mediateinter-

Page 15: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

M e c h a n i s m s o f c h e m i c a l r e a c t i o n s 15

Transition state — an assembly of atoms through which the reaction must pass on going from reactants to products in either direction.

Reaction intermediate — molecular entity that is formed from the reactants and reacts further to give the reaction products.

Elementary (simple) reaction proceeds in one step (no intermediates are detected).

Composite (complex) reaction involves more than one elementary reactions.

Page 16: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

M e c h a n i s m s o f c h e m i c a l r e a c t i o n s 16

Common types of composite reactions:

Consecutive (stepwise) A B C

Parallel B A C

Consecutive-parallel BACD

Cyclic ABD

CX Y

Page 17: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

F a c t o r s a f f e c t i n g t h e r e a c t i o n r a t e 17

a) Nature and structure of reactants — the most obvious but least understood factor.

b) Type of reaction — homogeneous or hetero-geneous.

c) Concentration — the Rate Law (usually applies for homogeneous reactions).

d) Temperature — all elementary and most (but not all) other reaction rates increase with temperature (van't Hoff's rule).

e) Presence of catalysts — catalysis and inhibition, enzymatic catalysis.

Page 18: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

T h e R a t e L a w 18

aA + bB → cC + dD

v

= k

• cx(A) • cy(B) v

= k

• cm(C) • cn(D)

In most cases x, y, m, n have small integer values (0, 1, or 2)

For elementary reactions x = a, y = b, m = c, n = d

Page 19: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

T h e r e a c t i o n o r d e r a n d m o l e c u l a r i t y 19

The rate coefficient, or rate constant (for an elementary reaction) is concentration independent.

A reaction order in a reactant (x for A, y for B, etc.) can be determined by experiment only.

The overall reaction order — the sum of reaction orders in all reactants (x + y).

The reaction molecularity — the number of reactant molecules involved in the elementary reaction.

Page 20: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

T h e r e a c t i o n o r d e r a n d m o l e c u l a r i t y 20

Unimolecular reactions (usually decomposition): 

O3 → O2 + O

N2O4 → 2NO2

Bimolecular reactions (most common): 

2NO2 → N2O4

NO + O3 → NO2 + O2

Termolecular reactions (extremely rare): 

2NO + O2 → N2O4

Page 21: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

T h e r e a c t i o n o r d e r a n d m o l e c u l a r i t y 21

Rate controlling step (rcs) — an elementary reaction in a composite reaction sequence the rate constant for which exerts the strongest effect on the overall reaction rate

In most cases the overall rate is equal to the rate of rcs

Page 22: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

T h e r e a c t i o n o r d e r a n d m o l e c u l a r i t y 22

Zeroth-order reactions (rare) — the reaction rate is concentration independent: ν = k. Typical for physical processes (evaporation, sublimation, etc.).

First-order reactions (common) — the reaction rate is proportional to a reactant concentration: ν = kcA.

Second-order reactions (most common) — the reaction rate is either first-order in each of two reactants (mixed second-order reaction, ν = kcAcB) or proportional to a square concentration of one of the reactants (simple second-order reaction, ν = kc2

A).

Third-order reactions (very rare) — only a few cases of mixed third-order reactions (ν = kc2

AcB) are known.

Page 23: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

K i n e t i c s o f e l e m e n t a r y r e a c t i o n s 23

Zeroth order First order Second order

A → B A → B A → Bν = k ν = k cA ν = k c2

A

c = c0 – kt c = c0e–kt c =

c0/(1 + c0kt)

c

vZero orderFirst orderSecond order

Page 24: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

K i n e t i c s o f e l e m e n t a r y r e a c t i o n s 24

Half-life, or half-conversion (t1/2) of a reactant is the time taken for the reactant concentration to decrease two times.

Zeroth order First order Second order

t1/2 = c0/(2k) t1/2 = ln 2/k t1/2 = 1/(c0k)

t

cZero order

First order

Second order

Page 25: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

D r u g e l i m i n a t i o n a n d r a d i o a c t i v e d e c a y 25

Most drugs are eliminated by the liver and kidney. Usually it is a first-order process.

Elimination rate constant (Kel) — the fraction of drug eliminated per unit of time.

Page 26: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

D r u g e l i m i n a t i o n a n d r a d i o a c t i v e d e c a y 26

Typical t1/2 for drugs are 1.5–36 h (Kel 0.5–0.02 h–1)

50

25

12.56.25

100

4 8 12 16 20 24

c, %

t, h

Drug elimination(Kel = 0.17 h–1)

Page 27: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

D r u g e l i m i n a t i o n a n d r a d i o a c t i v e d e c a y 27

Radioactive decay — usually a first-order process.

Example. Isotope 131I is commonly used for the diagnostics of thyroid dysfunction. Calculate the time required to decrease the 131I activity 100 times if the isotope half-life is 8 days.

Page 28: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

S t e a d y - s t a t e c o n c e n t r a t i o n 28

Steady-state concentration (ssc) — a period in therapy when the amount of drug administered during a dosing interval exactly replaces the amount of drug eliminated. Usually achieved in six half lives of the drug:

0

0.005

0.01

0.015

0.02

0.025

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 t, h

c, mmol/L

Drug concentration in plasma Severe side effects level Therapeutic level

Page 29: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

S t e a d y - s t a t e c o n c e n t r a t i o n 29

With a higher initial dose, the ssc may be achieved faster (ideally, after the second administration):

0

0.005

0.01

0.015

0.02

0.025

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 t, h

c, mmol/L

Drug concentration in plasma Severe side effects level Therapeutic level

Page 30: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

R e a c t i o n r a t e a n d t e m p e r a t u r e 30

Van't Hoff's rule: the rise in temperature by 10 degrees increases the reaction rate constant 2–4 times:

Page 31: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

R e a c t i o n r a t e a n d t e m p e r a t u r e 31

However, van't Hoff's rule does not work for some reactions:

v

T

v

T

v

T20 30 40

Most Few composite Enzymatic reactions reactions  reactions

Page 32: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

R e a c t i o n r a t e a n d t e m p e r a t u r e 32

Example. Reaction rate of a reaction with normal temperature dependence is 0.02 mol/(L • s) at 20 °C and 0.18 mol/(L • s) at 40 °C. Calculate the temperature coefficient and the reaction rate at 50 °C.

Page 33: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

A c t i v a t i o n e n e r g y 33

A + B ⇄ C + D

Activation energy (Ea) — an empirical parameter

that characterizes the exponential temperature depen-dence of the reaction rate coefficient.

E

A + B

C + D

Ea

A + B

E

C + D

Ea

Page 34: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

A c t i v a t i o n e n e r g y 34

Arrhenius equation:

Page 35: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

A c t i v a t i o n e n e r g y 35

Increase in temperature increases average energy of particles in the reaction mixture. As a result, the number of particles with any given energy also increases:

Reaction rates are temperature dependent because effective collisions require certain kinetic energy.

T1 T2<n

E

Page 36: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

C a t a l y s i s 36

Catalyst — a substance that increases the rate of a reaction but does not affect the overall ΔG0

reaction.

Inhibitor — a substance that decreases the rate of a chemical reaction (sometimes called "negative catalyst").

Catalyst is both a reactant and a product of the reaction, i. e. it does not change in the overall reaction process.

Page 37: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

C a t a l y s i s 37

A + B ⇄ C + D

Without catalyst: With catalyst (X):

A + B AB (slowest, E

a) A + X AX (fast)

AX + B AXB (slow, E

a) AB CD (fast) AXB CXD (fast) CXD CX + D (fast) CD C + D (fast) CX C + X (fast)

Page 38: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

C a t a l y s i s 38

E

A + B

C + DAXB

EaEa Ea

Ea

A + B ⇄ C + D

Page 39: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

C a t a l y s i s 39

Homogeneous catalysis — both the catalyst and the reactants are in the same phase (usually in a solution).

Heterogeneous catalysis — the reaction occurs at or near the surface between phases

Page 40: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

T y p i c a l m e c h a n i s m s o f c a t a l y s i s 40

Heterogeneous catalysis (selective or non-selective)

a) Bond formation:

b) Bond cleavage:

X X X X

A B

X X X XA B

A B

X X X X

A B

X X X X X X X XA B

X X X X

A B

Page 41: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

T y p i c a l m e c h a n i s m s o f c a t a l y s i s 41

Enzymatic catalysis (highly selective, or specific):

Enzyme — a macromolecule, mostly of protein nature, that functions as a (bio)catalyst.

Substrate — a substance that undergoes a reaction catalyzed by enzyme.

Page 42: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

M i c h a e l i s – M e n t e n k i n e t i c s 42

Catalytic saturation — a substrate (S) is present in a large excess over the concentration of enzyme (E).

Typical enzyme-catalyzed reaction ("opposing" process):

E + S [ES] E + Pk1

k1 k2

Michaelis–Menten equation:

Page 43: Chemistry 1st yr 5th lecture

M i c h a e l i s – M e n t e n k i n e t i c s 43

Km is equal to the substrate concentration when ν = νmax/2.

Km is not a constant! It depends on the substrate, pH, temperature and concentration of the enzyme.Typical Km values are from 10–5 to 10–1 mol/L.

The lower the Km, the faster the reaction.

v

vmax

Km cS

Firstorder

reaction

Zeroorderreaction

vmax2


Recommended