Reaction Energy and Reaction Kinetics

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Ch. 16 – Reaction Energy and Reaction Kinetics
Advertisements

Reaction Energy and Reaction Kinetics
A cup of hot tea is made and is left on a table. What do you expect to spontaneously happen to the temperature of the tea?
Chemical Kinetics. CA Standards Collision Model Collisions must have enough energy to produce the reaction (must equal or exceed the activation energy).Collisions.
KINETICS AND EQUILIBRIUM HOW SUBSTACNCES REACT!. UNIT 6 KINETICS AND EQUILIBRIUM CHEMICAL KINETICS A. Definition: Branch of chemistry concerned with the.
Kinetics and Equilibrium Chapter 15. I: Definitions Activation Energy: the minimum amount of energy needed to produce an activated complex Heat of Reaction:
Thermochemistry Study of the transfer of energy in chemical reactions.
Kinetics: Reaction Rates and Potential Energy Diagrams
Reaction Rates and Equilibrium Chapter Expressing Reaction Rates rates are expressed as a change in quantity (concentration) over a change in.
Homework Read pages: Answer questions from packet on pages:
Energy & Chemical Reactions. I.Kinetics – area of chemistry concerned with rates of chemical reactions A.Reaction Rates 1.The change of concentration.
The Kinetic Theory of Matter states that matter is composed of a large number a small particles—individual atoms or molecules—that are in constant motion.
Chemical Kinetics Branch of chemistry concerned with the rates and mechanisms of chemical reactions.
Chapter 17 Energy and Chemical Change. Thermochemistry The study of heat changes in chemical reactions.
Reaction Energy and Reaction Kinetics
The Driving Forces of Reactions. In chemistry we are concerned with whether a reaction will occur spontaneously, and under what conditions will it occur.
Thermodynamics Is it hot in here or what?. Energy Many forms and sources Thermochemistry is interested in heat exchanges Breaking bonds takes energy.
Kinetics. Kinetics - rates of chemical reactions and the mechanisms by which they occur Rate of a chemical reaction - change in the concentration of products.
Kinetics The study of the mechanisms of a reaction and the rates of reaction.
KINETICS How Fast Does A Reaction Occur? Energy Diagrams l Reactants always start a reaction so they are on the left side of the diagram. Reactants l.
Kinetics, Thermodynamics and Equilibrium Regents Chemistry.
The Driving Forces of Reactions AP Chemistry. In chemistry we are concerned with whether a reaction will occur spontaneously, and under what conditions.
 What is the formula for finding heat?  What are the two units of heat?  The temperature of a sample of iron with a mass of 10.0 g changed from 50.4.
Unit 11 Thermodynamics Chapter 16. Thermodynamics Definition Definition A study of heat transfer that accompanies chemical changes A study of heat transfer.
Entropy and Gibbs free energy. 2 Exothermic The products are lower in energy than the reactants Releases energy Often release heat.
 I can identify and describe the five factors that affect reaction rates.
Kinetics.
Kinetics and Equilibrium Unit VI. I Kinetics A. Kinetics is the study of the rates of reactions and reaction mechanisms  Rate  Speed of a reaction 
Kinetics and Equilibrium. Kinetics Kinetics is the part of chemistry that examines the rates of chemical reactions. Collision theory is the concept of.
Test: May 23, 2013 THURSDAY. 2 How fast does aging occur? 3 strategie.de/Anti%2 0Aging%20Strategie.JPG How fast does the candle burn?
Kinetics and Equilibrium Review. The stability of a compound is dependent on the amount of energy absorbed or released during the formation of the compound.
Chemical Kinetics Rates of chemical reactions Mechanisms of chemical reactions.
Thermochemistry Specific HeatEnthalpyEntropy Gibbs free energy Miscellaneous Questions
Chapter 23 Thermodynamics What is the driving force for every process in the universe?
CHEMICAL KINETICS. Chemical kinetics: is a branch of chemistry which deals with the rate of a chemical reaction and the mechanism by which the chemical.
Reaction Process. A reaction mechanism is a step by step sequence of reactions that show an overall chemical change The same reaction can occur by different.
Kinetics and Equilibrium Chapter 18. KINETICS Deals with: Speed of chemical reactions RATE of reaction Way reactions occur MECHANISM of reaction.
How do reactions occur? Must have an effective collision between reacting particles for reaction to occur. “Collision Theory” Collision must be energetic.
Concept 16 Thermodynamics
Thermodynamics Is it hot in here or what?.
Chemical Thermodynamics
Reaction Process.
Kinetics , Thermodynamics and Equilibrium
Chemical kinetics: In what way do chemical reactions occur
Reaction Rates and Equilibrium
Chemical Kinetics Unit 11 – Chapter 17.
Gibbs Free Energy -most chemical reactions are exothermic since releasing energy will allow products to have a lower energy state -there is a tendency.
CHEMICAL KINETICS.
Kinetics.
CHEMICAL KINETICS.
Chemical Kinetics.
Energy Many forms and sources
Thermodynamics.
Kinetics and Equilibrium
Thermodynamics.
Chapter 15 – Fast and Slow Chemistry
ENERGY & CHEMICAL CHANGE
Ch. 16 – Reaction Energy and Reaction Kinetics
How Fast Does A Reaction Occur?
Ch. 16 – Reaction Energy and Reaction Kinetics
Thermodynamics Lecture 1
1.3.2 Enthalpy, Entropy, and Spontaneous Changes
10-8 Entropy, Free Energy, and Spontaneity (Section 10.10)
Kinetics and Equilibrium
Ch.17 Thermochemistry.
Collision Theory of Reactions
Reaction Kinetics and Equilibrium
Rates of Reaction and Equilibrium
How Fast Does the Reaction Go
Heat and Energy! Created by Educational Technology Network
Presentation transcript:

Reaction Energy and Reaction Kinetics General Chemistry Unit 12

Driving Forces Enthalpy and Entropy Enthalpy (heat of reaction) is the amount of energy released or absorbed during a chemical reaction Symbol is ΔH Think of it as energy needed

Thermochemical Equations A thermochemical equation shows the energy (enthalpy) change in the reaction Put in as reactant or product 2 H2 + O2 → 2 H2O + 483.6 kJ List behind as ΔH 2 H2 + O2 → 2 H2O ΔH = -483.6 kJ If energy is released (product) the reaction is exothermic and ΔH is negative If energy is absorbed (reactant) the reaction is endothermic and ΔH is positive

Entropy Entropy is a measure of randomness, tendency toward disorder Symbol is ΔS More disorder = more entropy If reaction leads to more disorder, the entropy change (ΔS) is positive, if it becomes more ordered, ΔS is negative Example: melting ice, condensing water, cleaning your room (+,-,-)

Free Energy (ΔG) Free energy combines enthalpy and entropy to measure the spontanaeity of a reaction Gibbs Free Energy Equation: ΔG = ΔH - T ΔS (T is in Kelvin: +273 to ºC) If ΔG is negative, reaction is spontaneous If ΔG is positive, reaction is NOT spontaneous, but would be spontaneous in the reverse direction

Example Find ΔG for the reaction: NH4Cl(s) → NH3(g) + HCl(g) Using the following data: ΔH = 176 kJ, ΔS = 285 J/K, T = 25ºC Solution: (Change to kJ and K) ΔG = 176 kJ – (298 K)(.285 kJ/K) ΔG = 176 kJ – 84.9 kJ = 91 kJ NOT spontaneous

Comparison of Signs ΔH ΔS ΔG Spontaneous? - + - ALWAYS spont. + - + NEVER spont. - - - / + Spont. at low T + + - / + Spont. at high T

Reaction Mechanisms Step-by-step sequence that occurs to create the products Intermediates may form that do not appear in overall reaction – they are used up in another step Homogeneous reaction: all reactants in same phase Heterogeneous reaction: reactants in different phases Rate-determining step: slowest step of reaction mechanism

Activation Energy Minimum energy to make the reaction go (form activated complex which allows reaction to proceed) Reaction needs: Enough energy Proper orientation of molecules – must hit each other at correct spot

Energy Diagrams

Exothermic/Endothermic

Energy Example Calculate the ΔH. Calculate the Ea. Calculate the Ea‘. (products – reactants) 20 kJ – 40 kJ = -20 kJ Calculate the Ea. (top of hill – reactants) 100 kJ – 40 kJ = 60 kJ Calculate the Ea‘. (top of hill – products) 100 kJ – 20 kJ = 80 kJ

Reaction Rate Rate can be defined in terms of molar concentration (M) for the disappearance of a reactant or the appearance of a product Concentration shown as: [HCl] = 0.1 means the molar concentration of HCl is 0.1 M

Factors Affecting Reaction Rate Nature of reactants Concentration Temperature Catalysts

Nature of Reactants Ionic – almost instantaneous Molecular – slower (bonds must break and reform) Surface area – rate increases with greater surface area (more collisions make more activated complexes)

Concentration Measured in molarity [A] Increasing the concentration of reactants increases the rate (more collisions → more activated complexes)

Temperature Increasing the temperature, increases energy, increasing the number and force of collisions between molecules ↑ T → ↑ collisions → ↑ complexes → ↑ rate

Catalysts Catalyst – increase reaction rate without being used up Lower the activation energy Animation Heterogeneous – not in same phase as reactants, provides surface to give more effective collisions Catalytic Converter Homogeneous – In same phase as reactants, makes different activated complex, returns to original form at end of reaction Demo: Catalysts