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Chemical Kinetics: By:-Divyam Verma Ankur Kumar Deepak Kumar

1. Chemical kinetics is the area of chemistry concerned with reaction rates and how different factors influence these rates. 2. The four main factors that affect reaction rates are the physical states of reactants, concentration of reactants, temperature, and presence of a catalyst. 3. Reaction rates depend on the frequency and energy of collisions between reactant particles, which increase with higher concentrations and temperatures as well as when a catalyst is present.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
146 views36 pages

Chemical Kinetics: By:-Divyam Verma Ankur Kumar Deepak Kumar

1. Chemical kinetics is the area of chemistry concerned with reaction rates and how different factors influence these rates. 2. The four main factors that affect reaction rates are the physical states of reactants, concentration of reactants, temperature, and presence of a catalyst. 3. Reaction rates depend on the frequency and energy of collisions between reactant particles, which increase with higher concentrations and temperatures as well as when a catalyst is present.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chemical

Kinetics

By :- Divyam verma
Ankur kumar
Deepak kumar
Factors that Affect Reaction Rates
 The area of chemistry that is concerned
with the speeds, or rates, of reactions is
called chemical kinetics.
 Reaction rates depend on the frequency
of the collisions between the particles.
 The four factors that affect the rate of
reaction are the physical states of the
reactants, concentration of reactants,
temperature, and presence of a catalyst.
Physical States
 Reactions occur the fastest when the
molecules are colliding quickly.
 When the reactants are the same state of
matter, reactions tend to occur faster.
 When a solid has a larger surface area
(crushed), a reaction proceeds faster.
Concentration
 Most chemical reactions proceeds faster
if the concentration of one or more of the
reactants is increased.
 The increase in reaction rate is due to an
increase in collisions of particles.
Temperature
 The rate of a chemical reaction increases
as temperature increases.
 As temperature increases, the particles
collide more frequently and with greater
energy.
Catalyst
 Catalysts speed up a reaction be
changing the mechanism that leads to
the products.
 Catalysts are not considered reactants or
products and are listed about the yield
sign.
Reaction Rates
 Therate of a reaction can be expressed as either
the disappearance of the reactant or the
appearance of the product.
AB
Appearance of B = D[B]
Dt

Disappearance of A = -D[A]
Dt
Reaction Rates with Time
 Itis typical for rates to decrease as a
reaction proceeds because the
concentration of reactants decreases.
Instantaneous Rate
 Graphs showing us the change in concentration
with time allow us to calculate the instantaneous
rate, the rate at a particular moment.
 The instantaneous rate is the slope of a line drawn
at a point on the graph. (tangent)
Stoichiometry
 When determining the reaction rates for a chemical
reaction, the coefficients must be used.
aA + bB  cC + dD

Reaction = - 1 D[A] = -1 D[B] = 1 D[C] = 1 D[D]


Rate a Dt b Dt c Dt d Dt
The Rate Law: The Effect of
Concentration on Rate
 The rate law shows how the rate of a
reaction depends on the concentration
of the reactants.
 The rate law of a reaction can only be
determined experimentally, not by the
coefficients of a reaction.
Rate Law

 The rate law is written as follows:


aA + bB  cC + dD
Rate = k[A]m[B]n

k = rate constant which changes with


temperature
m and n = typically small whole numbers
Determining Rate Law

Using the chart, we can see that the rate


law would be
Rate = k[NH4+][NO2-]
Since the rates change with a direct
proportion to the concentrations of both
reactants.
Reaction Orders
 The exponents m and n in a rate law are
called the reaction orders.
 The overall reaction order is the sum of
the reaction orders.
Rate = k[NH4+][NO2-]
NH4+ = 1st order
NO2- = 1st order
Overall reaction order = 2nd order
Units for Rate Constants
 Theunits for the rate constant depend on
the overall reaction order of the rate law.
The Change of Concentration with
Time
A first order reaction is one whose rate
depends on the concentration of a single
reactant to the first power.
Differential Rate Law Rate = k[A]
Integrated Rate Law ln[A]t = -kt + ln[A]0

 You
can use this equation to solve for
concentration or time.
Reaction Rate Graphs
 For a 1st order reaction, a graph of ln[A]t
vs. time will give a straight line.

ln[A]t = -kt + ln[A]0


y = mx + b
Second Order Rates
A second order reaction is one whose
rate depends on the reactant
concentration to the 2nd power or 2
reactants to the 1st power.
Differential Rate Law Rate = k[A]2
Integrated Rate Law 1/[A]t = kt + 1/[A]0
y = mx + b
Half-Life
 The half-life of a reaction, t1/2, is the time
required for the concentration of a
reactant to reach one-half of its initial
value, [A]t1/2 = ½ [A]0.
 A fast reaction will have a short half-life.
 Half-life for a 1st order reaction.
t1/2 = 0.693/k
Half-Life
 Using the equation from the previous slide,
you can see that the half-life of a first
order reaction does not depend on initial
concentration.
 In a 1st order reaction, the concentration
of the reactant decreases by ½ in each of
a series of regularly spaced time intervals,
t1/2.
Half-life for 2nd Order
 The half-life of a 2nd order reaction does
depend on initial concentration.
t1/2 = 1/k[A]0
The lower the initial concentration, the
larger the half-life.
Temperature and Rate
 The rates of most chemical reactions
increase as the temperature increases.
 The rate constant for a reaction increases
as temperature increases.
Collision Model
 The collision model is based on the idea
that particles must collide in order to
react.
 The greater the number of collision, the
greater the reaction rate.
 As the concentration of reactants
decreases, the number of collisions
decreases.
Collision Model
 Asthe temperature increases, the number
of collisions increases. The energy of the
collisions also increases.
Activation Energy
 Toreact, colliding molecules must have a
total kinetic energy equal to or greater
than a minimum value called the
activation energy, Ea.
Activation Energy
 The activation energy is energy difference
between the energy of the reactants and
the highest point on the energy pathway.
 The highest point on the energy pathway
is called the activated complex or
transition state.
Transition State
 The transition state is very unstable.
Arrhenius Equation
 Arrhenius discovered that most reaction
rate data obeyed 3 factors:
1. fraction of molecules possessing Ea.
2. number of collisions per second.
3. fraction of collisions with proper
orientation.
Reaction Mechanisms
A balanced equation for a chemical
reaction indicates the substances present
at the start of the reaction and those
produced as the reaction proceeds.
 The process by which a reaction occurs is
called the reaction mechanism.
Elementary Reactions
 Reactions that occur in a single step are
called elementary reactions.
 The number of molecules that participate
are reactants in an elementary reactions
defines the molecularity.
Molecularity
 Unimolecular = a single molecule is
rearranged.
 Bimolecular = 2 molecules collide.
 Termolecular = 3 molecules collide.
 Elementary reactions that involve 3 or
more molecules colliding are rarely
encountered.
Intermediate
 An
intermediate is a substance formed
and then consumed during the reaction
mechanism.
Rate Laws
 Every reaction is made up of a series of
one or more elementary steps, and the
rate laws and relative speeds of these
steps will dictate the overall rate law.
 If a reaction is an elementary reaction,
then its rate law is based directly on its
molecularity.
A  products
Rate = k[A]
Catalysis
A catalyst is a substance that changes
the speed of a chemical reaction without
undergoing a permanent chemical
change itself in the process.
 A catalyst that is present in the same
phase as the reacting molecules is called
a homogenous catalyst.
Catalyst
 Neither a catalyst nor an intermediate is
listed in the overall reaction.
 The catalyst is there at the start of the
reaction, whereas the intermediate is
formed during the course of the reaction.
 A catalyst lowers the overall activation
energy for the chemical reaction.
Catalyst
A heterogeneous catalyst
exists in a different phase
from the reactant molecules,
usually as a solid in contact
with either gaseous reactants
or with reactants in a liquid
solution.
 The initial step in
heterogeneous catalysis is
usually adsorption of
reactants.

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