kinetics and equilibrium

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Kinetics and Equilibrium

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Kinetics and Equilibrium. Kinetics. The branch of chemistry known as chemical kinetics is concerned with the rates of chemical reactions and the mechanisms by which they occur. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Kinetics and Equilibrium

Kinetics and Equilibrium

Page 2: Kinetics and Equilibrium

Kinetics• The branch of chemistry known as

chemical kinetics is concerned with the rates of chemical reactions and the mechanisms by which they occur.

Page 3: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• The rate of a chemical reaction is measured in terms of the # of moles of a reactant consumed (or produced) in a unit of time.

Page 4: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• The mechanism of a chem rxn attempts to describe the order of events in which the reaction takes place.

Page 5: Kinetics and Equilibrium

Energy and Reaction Rates• Energy is required to initiate a rxn.

Activation energy is defined as the min energy required to make a rxn occur.

Page 6: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• The heat of reaction illustrates the difference in heat content before and after the rxn.

Page 7: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• It is also the difference in potential

energy between the prod and reactants.

Page 8: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• If the products have less energy than the reactants, the reaction is considered exothermic.

Page 9: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• Endothermic reactions occur when the products have more energy than the reactants. They are given by a positive heat of rxn.

Page 10: Kinetics and Equilibrium

Potential Energy Diagram• We can show the relationship between

activation energy and heat of reaction for a given rxn on a graph.

Page 11: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• We place PE on the vertical axis, and the “reaction coordinate” on the horizontal axis.

Page 12: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• In order for any rxn to occur, an activated complex must be formed.

Page 13: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• This is an intermediate product, and may be considered to be a temporary association of atoms or molecules which when finished, will give us our products.

Page 14: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• The highest point on the curve of a PE diagram shows the PE of the intermediate product (activated complex).

Page 15: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• Once the formation of an activated

complex has occurred, the rxn can continue to give the products.

Page 16: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• The PE of the products will be lower than the peak energy of the activated complex.

Page 17: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• If the PE is higher for the products, the rxn was endothermic, and if the PE is higher for the reactants, the rxn was exothermic.

Page 18: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• The heat of reaction is strictly the difference between the PE’s of the products and reactants, and is the same regardless of the amounts of each involved.

Page 19: Kinetics and Equilibrium

Factors that Affect Reaction Rates• Chem rxns depend on collisions

between reacting species - atoms, molecules, ions, etc.

Page 20: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• A rxn only occurs when adequate energy has been given to form an activated complex.

Page 21: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• Generally speaking, anything that causes more collisions to occur will increase the rate of reaction.

Page 22: Kinetics and Equilibrium

Nature of the Reactants• The nature of the reactants, with respect

to the types of bonds involved, contributes to determining the rate of rxn.

Page 23: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• If few bond rearrangements are necessary, the rxn will occur quickly, such as with ionic substances in water.

Page 24: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• If bonds need to be broken or newly created, more time is necessary, such as oxygen and hydrogen bonding to form water.

Page 25: Kinetics and Equilibrium

Concentration• If the concentration of one or more

reactants is increased, the rate of rxn increases. Compressing a gas has the same effect.

Page 26: Kinetics and Equilibrium

Temperature• An increase in temperature will increase

the rate of reaction for two reasons - increased frequency of collisions and increased energy values in each collision.

Page 27: Kinetics and Equilibrium

Reaction Mechanism• Most reactions do not occur in a single

step, but in a series of steps called the reaction mechanism.

Page 28: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• Each individual step is generally a two-particle collision, and the number of steps and their individual complexity affects the rate of the overall rxn. The more steps, the slower the rxn.

Page 29: Kinetics and Equilibrium

Catalysts• Fast reactions have low activation

energies, while slow reactions have high activation energies.

Page 30: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• The addition of a catalyst to a system changes its activation energy, thereby changing its rate of rxn.

Page 31: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• A catalyzed rxn requires less activation energy, without changing the overall rxn.

Page 32: Kinetics and Equilibrium

• Even though the activated complexes in a catalyzed rxn have less PE than a non-catalyzed rxn, the heats of rxn are the same.