Chapter 6
Chapter 6
Chapter 6
Chapter 6
Subtopics
Definition of rate
Rate Laws and Rate Constants
Reaction Order
The Determination of the Rate Law
Integrated Rate Laws
Half-Lives and Time Constants
The Arrhenius Parameters
Collision Theory
Transition State Theory
Definition of Rate
How do we describe the speed at which a reaction
occurs?
J
Rate
t
J Change in the molar concentration of species J.
∆t = time interval
time
[A]
rate = -
t
[B]
rate =
t
• For the reaction
aA bB cC dD
1 A 1 B 1 C 1 D
rate - -
a t b t c t d t
Write the rate expression for the following reaction:
slope of
tangent
slope of
tangent slope of
tangent
[Br2] [Br2]final – [Br2]initial
average rate = - =-
t tfinal - tinitial
Instantaneous rate:
rate at specific time = slope of graph of its molar
concentration vs time.
Self Test 1
The rate of formation of NH3 in the
reaction N2(g) + 3 H2(g) →2 NH3(g) was
reported as 1.2 mmol dm-3 s-1 under a
certain set of conditions. What is the rate
of consumption of H2?
Rate Laws and Rate
Constants
Rate laws and rate constants
The rate of reactions is often found to be proportional to the
molar concentrations of the reactants raised to a simple
power.
Rate k A B
k = Rate constant; independent of concentration but
depend on temperature
rate = k [F2][ClO2]
The Determination of the Rate
Law
Isolation method
Method of initial rates
The determination of the rate law
• Isolation method
– All reactants except one are present in large
excess
– If reactant B in large excess, take it
concentration as constant throughout the
reaction.
Rate k A B
2
Rate k A with k k B
' ' 2
o
- The effective rate law is classified as pseudo
first-order and k’ is called effective rate
constant for a given, fixed concentration of B.
– If reactant A in large excess, the rate law is
simplified to
Rate k '' B with k '' k A o
2
Rate k ' A
a
0 o
Concentration-Time
Order Rate Law Equation Half-Life
If a plot of reactant concentration versus time is not linear but a plot of the
natural logarithm of reactant concentration versus time is linear, then the
reaction is first order.
The reaction 2A B is first order in A with a rate
constant of 2.8 x 10-2 s-1 at 800C. How long will it take for A
to decrease from 0.88 M to 0.14 M ?
[A]0
ln
[A]0/2 ln2 0.693
t½ = = =
k k k
The half life of a reactant is independent of its
concentration
= 1200 s = 20 minutes
What is the half-life of N2O5 if it decomposes with a rate
constant of 5.7 x 10-4 s-1?
t½ = ln2 = 0.693
k 5.7 x 10-4 s-1
How do you know decomposition is first order?
units of k (s-1)
Second-Order Reactions
d[A]
A product rate = - rate = k [A]2
dt
1
t½ = t when [A] = [A]0/2 t½ =
k[A]0
Self Test 2
• Pb 10.9
• Pb 10.12
• Pb 10.21
The Arrhenius Parameters
Temperature Dependence of the Rate Constant
k = A • exp( -Ea/RT )
(Arrhenius equation)
Ea is the activation energy (J/mol)
R is the gas constant (8.314 J/K•mol)
T is the absolute temperature
A is the frequency factor
Ea 1
lnk = - + lnA
R T
Ea 1
lnk = - + lnA
R T
Figure 10.18
• High activation energy corresponds to a
reaction rate that is very sensitive to
temperature.
• Small activation energy shows a reaction
rate that varies only slightly with
temperature.
k1 E a 1 1
ln
k2 R T2 T1
Collision Theory
• Reaction occurs only if two molecules collide
with a certain minimum kinetic energy along
their line approach.
• The rate of collision (collision frequency) is
proportional to concentration of reactants.
Collision frequency [A][B]