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Published byRudolf Clarke Modified over 9 years ago
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Molecular Reaction Dynamics
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Collision Theory of Kinetics With few exceptions, the reaction rate increases with increasing temperature temperature If we assume that a chemical reaction takes place due to collisions between reactant molecules i.e. rate number of collisions / unit time A 2 + B 2 product rate = k 2 [A 2 ][B 2 ] “collision of A 2 and B 2 causes a reaction”
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Rate constant vs. T
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The Reaction Profile
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The Activation Energy The minimum amount of energy need for initiation of a chemical reaction is the activation energy (E a ). Colliding reactant molecules possess kinetic energy > the activation energy or E a.
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The Activated Complex Activated Complex the species temporarily formed by the reactant molecules as a result of collisions A small fraction of molecules usually have the required kinetic energy to get to the transition state the concentration of the activated complex is extremely small.
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The Arrhenius Equation Arrhenius showed how the rate constant depended on temperature. The frequency factor The activation energy
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The Arrhenius Equation
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Estimating Rate Constants We can use collision theory to provide a basis estimating the rate constant. What if all collisions gave products?
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The Energy Requirement Since we know only a fraction of collisions will give products
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Converting to Molar Amounts
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The Calculated Rate Law
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The Geometrical Requirement There are many collisions of sufficient energy that do not yield products Define the steric factor P to account for local properties of the molecule Orientations during collisions Substituent effects
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Effective Collisions
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Ineffective Collisions
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The Steric Factor and k 2 Note values of P can be quite small Usually in the range < 0.001
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Limitations of Collision Theory Simple Collision Theory Best suited for studying reactions between simple species (atoms, diatomic molecules). P factor indicates how reactants collide becomes very important when the species get bigger.
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