Chemical Kinetics : rate of a chemical reaction Before a chemical reaction can take place the molecules involved must be raised to a state of higher potential.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Heat Capacity of a Diatomic Gas
Advertisements

The Kinetic Theory of Gases
Pressure and Kinetic Energy
CHEMICAL KINETICS CHAPTER 17, Kinetics Fall 2009, CHEM
CHEMICAL KINETICS CLASS- XII VINAY KUMAR PGT CHEMISTRY KV NTPC KAHALGAON PATNA REGION.
Lecture 4 – Kinetic Theory of Ideal Gases
CHAPTER 14 THE CLASSICAL STATISTICAL TREATMENT OF AN IDEAL GAS.
Chemical Kinetics © 2009, Prentice-Hall, Inc. Temperature and Rate Generally, as temperature increases, so does the reaction rate. This is because k is.
EQUILIBRIUM AND KINETICS. Mechanical Equilibrium of a Rectangular Block Centre Of Gravity Potential Energy = f(height of CG) Metastable state Unstable.
Chemistry 130 Chemical Equilibrium Dr. John F. C. Turner 409 Buehler Hall
Activation Energy and Catalyst. Temperature and Rate Generally, as temperature increases, so does the reaction rate. This is because k is temperature.
Chemical Kinetics and Transition States Elementary Rate Laws k(T) Transition State Theory Catalysis.
Factors Affecting Reactions
Collision Theory In a chemical reaction, bonds are broken and new bonds are formed. Molecules react by colliding with each other.  molecules must collide.
ChE 452 Lecture 15 Transition State Theory 1. Conventional Transition State Theory (CTST) 2 TST  Model motion over a barrier  Use stat mech to estimate.
Integration of the rate laws gives the integrated rate laws
Reaction order The rate law can be written in a generalized form: v = k [A] a [B] b …. where a is the order of the reaction with respect to the species.
ChE 551 Lecture 19 Transition State Theory Revisited 1.
The Kinetic Theory of Gases
22.5 The temperature dependence of reaction rates Arrhenius equation: A is the pre-exponential factor; E a is the activation energy. The two quantities,
Chapter 19 Chemical Thermodynamics Lecture Presentation John D. Bookstaver St. Charles Community College Cottleville, MO © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.
Lecture 18 (Ch 18) HW: Ch 18: 1, 3, 15, 41 Kinetics pt 2: Temperature Dependence of Rate Constants.
Chemistry 232 Chemical Kinetics. Chemical kinetics - speed or rate at which a reaction occurs How are rates of reactions affected by Reactant concentration?
Chemistry. Chemical Kinetics - 2 Session Objectives 1.Methods of determining order of a reaction 2.Theories of chemical kinetics 3.Collision theory 4.Transition.
Kinetics and Thermodynamics of Simple Chemical Processes 2-1 Chemical thermodynamics: Is concerned with the extent that a reaction goes to completion.
Kinetics II Lecture 15. Rates and Concentrations Knowing the rate constant (usually empirically determined), we can compute rate. Integrating rate of.
Rate Theories of elementary reaction. 2 Transition state theory (TST) for bimolecular reactions Theory of Absolute reaction Rates Theory of activated.
1 Reaction Mechanism The series of steps by which a chemical reaction occurs. A chemical equation does not tell us how reactants become products - it is.
From the Arrhenius equation we have: 301. From the Arrhenius equation we have: 302.
Thermodynamics and Equilibrium. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company.All rights reserved. Presentation of Lecture Outlines, 19–2 –We introduced the thermodynamic.
 We just discussed statistical mechanical principles which allow us to calculate the properties of a complex macroscopic system from its microscopic characteristics.
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.
6 Kinetics Year 11 DP Chemistry.
ChE 452 Lecture 25 Non-linear Collisions 1. Background: Collision Theory Key equation Method Use molecular dynamics to simulate the collisions Integrate.
Lecture 8 Stability and reactivity. We tend to say that substances are ‘stable’ or ‘unstable’, ‘reactive’ or ‘unreactive’ but these terms are relative.
The Kinetic Theory of Gases
Kinetics II Lecture 15. Rates of Complex Reactions Complex reactions that involve a series of steps that must occur in sequence are called chain reactions.
Case two for second-order would occur for a reaction involving two reactants: A + B P 241.
A more appropriate definition of K (for the same chemical reaction discussed previously) is With this definition, each concentration term is divided by.
 I can identify and describe the five factors that affect reaction rates.
The Heat Capacity of a Diatomic Gas Chapter Introduction Statistical thermodynamics provides deep insight into the classical description of a.
Entropy and Boltzmann. Entropy on the Molecular Scale  Ludwig Boltzmann described the concept of entropy on the molecular level.  Temperature is a measure.
Energy & Heat Energy – ability to produce heat Heat - energy in the process of flowing from a warmer object to a cooler object. In chemical reactions.
Chemical Kinetics. Collision Theory of Reactions Collision theory is simple - for a reaction to occur, particles must collide successfully! A successful.
Simple Rate Equations Consider a chemical reaction: There are two common trends for the time rate of change of the concentration, C A. first order reaction.
Kinetics. Reaction Rate  Reaction rate is the rate at which reactants disappear and products appear in a chemical reaction.  This can be expressed as.
Chapter 5 Rates of Chemical Reaction. 5-1 Rates and Mechanisms of Chemical Reactions 5-2 Theories of Reaction Rate 5-3 Reaction Rates and Concentrations.
Energy Changes in Chemical Reactions -- Chapter First Law of Thermodynamics (Conservation of energy)  E = q + w where, q = heat absorbed by system.
Chapter 7 The electronic theory of metal Objectives At the end of this Chapter, you should: 1. Understand the physical meaning of Fermi statistical distribution.
Notes 14-4 Obj. 14.5, The half-life of a first-order reaction is equal to _________, where k is the rate constant. a / k b k c. k /2.
© 2009, Prentice-Hall, Inc. Temperature and Rate Generally, as temperature increases, so does the reaction rate. This is because k is temperature dependent.
Transition State Theory
Presented by UGA’s Academic Resource Center 02/28/16
The steric effect Steric factor, P, Reactive cross-section, σ*,
Rare Event Simulations
Unit 11- Chemical Kinetics
Einstein Model of Solid
§9.7 Transition state theory (TST)
Transition State Theory
Chemistry Thermodynamics
The Kinetic Theory of Gases
KINETICS CONTINUED.
Equilibrium and Kinetics
The Kinetic Theory of Gases
Kinetics.
6 Kinetics Year 11 DP Chemistry.
CHEM 3310 Chemical Kinetics Collision Theory & Transition State Theory.
How Fast Does A Reaction Occur?
Second-Order Processes
Presentation transcript:

Chemical Kinetics : rate of a chemical reaction Before a chemical reaction can take place the molecules involved must be raised to a state of higher potential energy. They are then said to be activated or to form an activated complex.

In 1889 Arrhenius said: 1)vant Hoff eq. for temperature coefficient of equilibrium constant is 2) mass-action law relates equilibrium constant to the ratio of rate constants Hence a reasonable eq. for the variation of rate constant with temperature is Where E a is the activation energy of the reaction

If E a does not depend on temperature, we can integrate this last eq. to obtain where ln A is the constant of integration. Hence This is the famous Arrhenius eq. for the rate constant. According to Arrhenius, molecules must acquire a certain critical energy E a before they can react. The Boltzmann factor is the fraction of molecules that manages to obtain the necessary energy. This interpretation is still held to be essentially correct.

Henry Eyring ( ) The rate of any chemical reaction can be formulated in terms of its activated complex. The rate of reaction is the number of activated complexes passing per second over the top of the potential energy barrier. This rate is equal to the concentration of activated complexes times the average velocity with which a complex moves across to the product side. Calculation of conc. of activated complexes is greatly simplified if we assume that they are in equil. with the reactants. This equil. can then be treated by means of thermodynamics or statistical mechanics.

Transition State Theory Consider this equilibrium: equil. constant for the formation of the complex is the conc. of complexes is thus according to transition state theory, the rate of reaction is The rate of passage over the barrier is equal to the frequency with which the complex flies apart into the products.

The complex flies apart when one of its vibrations becomes a translation, and what was formerly one of the bonds holding the complex together becomes simply the line of centers between separating fragments. The frequency is equal to where is the average energy of the vibration leading to decomposition. Since by hypothesis this is a thoroughly excited vibration at temperature T, it has its classical energy and hence frequency The reaction rate is therefore with rate constant

This is the general expression given by transition state theory for the rate constant of any elementary reaction. To be precise, the expression for k 2 should be multiplied by a factor called the transmission coefficient, which is the probability that the complex will not recross the transition state and dissociate back into products. In basic TST, The activated complex is similar to a normal stable molecule in every respect save one. The sole difference is that one of its vibrational degrees of freedom is missing, having been transformed into the translation along the reaction coordinate. Instead of 3N-6 vibrational modes, it has 3N-7 modes (non-linear case).

We can formulate k 2 in thermodynamic terms by introducing the standard free energy change This is the difference between the free energy of the activated complex and that of the reactants, when all are in their standard states. The quantities are called the free energy of activation, the heat of activation, and the entropy of activation. The heat of activation is almost equivalent to the experimental energy of activation E a, except for a PV term which is negligible for solid or liquid systems.

Chemical Before can correct for a wrong choice of transition state this way as well

challenges for computational modeling 1)where/what is the transition state? 2)what is the reaction coordinate? Schematic representation of the free energy landscape with two stable, attractive wells separated by a transition state ridge, which connects the highest free energy points of all possible paths connecting the reactant and product states. The dotted line represents a new trajectory that was branched of at point p from an old trajectory (bold line) and surpasses the TS ridge at a lower point.

Chemical

Before

Chemical Before

Chemical Before

Chemical Before

Chemical Before

Chemical Before

Example of a complicated reaction coordinate: aqueous proton transfer reaction what is the reaction coordinate?

Chemical Before

Transition path sampling

Chemical