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Ch. 12-13 Reaction Kinetics and Equilibrium

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Ch. 12-13. Reaction Kinetics and Equilibrium. Reaction Kinetics. Looks at the reaction process and the factors that help us predict reactions. Stability. Thermodynamically Stable: Reaction does not spontaneously occur Kinetically Stable: Spontaneous - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ch. 12-13

Ch. 12-13

Reaction Kinetics and Equilibrium

Page 2: Ch. 12-13

Reaction Kinetics

• Looks at the reaction process and the factors that help us predict reactions

Page 3: Ch. 12-13

Stability

• Thermodynamically Stable:– Reaction does not spontaneously

occur

• Kinetically Stable:– Spontaneous– Reaction is occurring so slow it is

undetected ( but things are still reacting)

– Ex. Decomposition of H2O2 (needs brown bottle)

Page 4: Ch. 12-13

Reaction Mechanism

• Rxn occurs in a series of steps

• Reaction Mechanism:– Series of reaction steps that must

occur for a reaction to go to completion– Each step has 2 particles colliding

Page 5: Ch. 12-13

Ex. A + B -> C (step 1)

C + D -> E (step 2)

E + F -> G (step 3)

Total Rxn : A+ B + D + F G

Page 6: Ch. 12-13

• There were intermediates in between that you never saw (C, E)

• you only see the original reactants and the final products

• Intermediates:– Something that appears in the series

but not in the final product

Page 7: Ch. 12-13

Ex. N2O N2 + O (step 1)

N2O + O N2 + O2 (step 2)

Total rxn. : 2N2O 2N2 + O2

(O was an intermediate)

Page 8: Ch. 12-13

• Clock Reactions

• Reaction Mechanism- teaching it

Page 9: Ch. 12-13

Homogeneous Reaction

• All reactant(s) and product(s) are in the same phase

Page 10: Ch. 12-13

Heterogeneous Reaction

• Reaction that takes place at the interface between 2 phases

• Zn (s) + HCl (aq) H2 (g) + ZnCl2 (aq)

( HCl bubbles on the surface of the Zn)

Page 11: Ch. 12-13

Collision Theory

In order for a rxn. to occur their particles must collide & those collisions must result in interactions

•Collisions must:– Collide w/ enough energy– Have particles positioned in a way that

enables them to react– Rate of reaction song

Page 12: Ch. 12-13
Page 13: Ch. 12-13

Factors that affect reaction rates:1. Nature of reaction:

• Dependent on the type of bond involved

• Ionic reaction rates, faster than covalent

2. Stirring:• Molecules in faster motion increase

probability that the particles will hit & collide w/ enough energy

Page 14: Ch. 12-13

3. Crushing:• Smaller pieces increase the surface

area so there are more possible sides for collisions Lycopodium Small scale- creamer Mythbusters-creamer

4. Concentration: (video)• Quantity of matter that exists in a unit

of volume• Increasing concentration increase #

of collisions therefore increasing rate• Ex. Double the concentration 4x

the collisions

Page 15: Ch. 12-13

5. Pressure (works for gases)• Increase pressure, decrease volume• So you have the same # of molecules

in a smaller space, more molecules per unit of volume (i.e. higher concentration) more collisions that could occur increase rate

Page 16: Ch. 12-13

6. Temperature:• Measure of average kinetic energy

(frequency of collisions)• Increase that frequency , the

collisions increase• Increase temperature does 2 things:

A. Heating up molecules, moves them faster, more chances for collisions

B. More kinetic energy in molecules increase the motion of particles, easier to get over that activation energy, rate of reaction will increase

Page 17: Ch. 12-13

Commercial BreakWhat is this?

Page 18: Ch. 12-13

A “Cattle List”(get it, a catalyst)

Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha,ha, ha, ha, ha (I crack

myself up)

Page 19: Ch. 12-13

7. Catalyst• A chemical that increases the speed of

the reaction but remains chemically unchanged

• Doesn’t change the normal position of the equilibrium

• Same amounts of product will be formed w/ or w/out the catalyst –just takes longer

• Types: homogeneous & heterogeneous• Sugar/sulfuric

Page 20: Ch. 12-13

Heterogeneous Catalyst

• Surface catalyst• Ex. metal oxides, platinum• Works by adsorption – the

adherence of one substance to the surface of another

• Catalyst has specific lumps that hold the chemicals in the right position to react (increase the chance of them coming together)

Page 21: Ch. 12-13

• Catalytic converter: – Platinum honeycomb structure (more

surface area)

– Pollution SO2, CO2, NO

• Converter lets H2O react w/ gases to convert them to weak acids (more complete combustion)

Page 22: Ch. 12-13

Homogeneous Catalyst

• In same phase as reactants

• Forms an intermediate or activated complex

• Reactant reacts better w/ the catalyst than the other reactant

• Ex. Sulfuric acid in ester reaction

enzymesColbalt chloride

Page 23: Ch. 12-13

8. Entropy• Chemical systems tend to achieve the

lowest possible energy state (more stable)• Law of Disorder – states that things move

spontaneously in the direction of maximum chaos

• Entropy • Can be thought of as– measure of the

disorder of the system or the randomness (more stable)

Page 24: Ch. 12-13

• Entropy • More exact definition- measure of the

number of possible ways that the energy of a system can be distributed; related to the freedom of the system’s particles to move and the number of ways they can be arranged (energy dispersal)

Page 25: Ch. 12-13

• Misconceptions about Entropy• This view of the second law of thermodynamics is very

popular, and it has been misused. Some argue that the second law of thermodynamics means that a system can never become more orderly. Not true. It just means that in order to become more orderly (for entropy to decrease), you must transfer energy from somewhere outside the system, such as when a pregnant woman draws energy from food to cause the fertilized egg to become a complete baby, completely in line with the second line's provisions.

Page 26: Ch. 12-13

• Entropy of gas is greater than liquid or solid

• Entropy increase when a substance is divided into parts

• Entropy increase w/ increase in temperature

Page 27: Ch. 12-13

9. Inhibitors• Prevents reaction from happening for a

certain length of time (delays reaction)• Not opposite of catalyst• Ex. Lemon juice on apples• A + B AB

• w/ inhibitor: A-inh + B no rxn.• Once inhibitor is used up then: A + B AB

Page 28: Ch. 12-13
Page 29: Ch. 12-13

Energy Diagrams

• Activation Energy:– Energy required to start a chemical

reaction– High activation energy few collisions

have enough energy for a reaction get slow undetected reaction

• Activated Complex:– Product formed when reactants have

collided w/ sufficient energy to meet activation energy requirement

Page 30: Ch. 12-13

Energy Diagram:Exothermic Rxn

-releases energy, lower energy after rxn.

Page 31: Ch. 12-13

Energy diagram:Endothermic Rxn.

-absorbed energy, higher energy after rxn.

Page 32: Ch. 12-13

• Endo thermic/exothemic song

Page 33: Ch. 12-13

Energy Diagram:Catalyst

-w/ catalyst product formed faster

-lowers the activation energy requirement

Page 34: Ch. 12-13

Reaction Rate:

• Rate of disappearance of one of the reactants or rate of appearance of one of the products

• Unit: (mole/L)/s– Change in molarity per second

Page 35: Ch. 12-13

• Reaction rate song (second time)

Page 36: Ch. 12-13

Rate Law:

• Rate is dependent on the concentration of the reactants

• Expression relating the rates of reaction to the concentration of reactants

• [ ] = concentration

Page 37: Ch. 12-13

A + B AB

• Rate = k [A] [B]

• k= specific rate constant (proportionality constant relating to concentration – value changes depending on rxn.)

Page 38: Ch. 12-13

Ex. H2 + I2 => 2HI

rate= k [H2 ] [I2 ]

Exp. 1- [H2 ] = 1.0M

[I2 ] = 1.0M rate= .20 M/sk=?.20= k [1.0M] [1.0M]k = .20

Page 39: Ch. 12-13

Exp. 2 - [H2] = .5 M [I2] = .5 M

rate = ?

k= .20

rate= k [H2 ] [I2 ]

rate = .20 [.5] [.5]

rate= .05 M/s

Page 40: Ch. 12-13

• The rate law for elementary reactions is just the product of the reactants, reactions that have more than one step you would need to figure out the order of reaction.

Page 41: Ch. 12-13

Rate Determining Step

• The step or reaction in the series that is slower than all the others the reaction rate is dependent on this

Ex. Person going 45 in the left lane on I-94

Page 42: Ch. 12-13

Reaction Order or Order of Reaction• Changing the concentration of

substances taking part in a reaction usually changes the rate of reaction

• A rate equation shows this effect mathematically

• Orders of reaction are a part of this rate equation (helps us describe the reaction )

• Orders of Reaction are always found by doing experiments

Page 43: Ch. 12-13

Elementary Reactions• A reaction with no intermediate steps (very

rare) – not a reliable way to determine order• One can determine the order with the

coefficients• Rate is proportional to the concentration of the

reactants raised to the power of the coefficients

Rate expressed as:

aA + bB cC + dD

Rate = k [A]a [B]b

( a and b are the coefficients)

Page 44: Ch. 12-13

Reaction Order

• Can determine reaction order experimentally or graphically

• Experimentally:• Gather data and see what happen to

rates if you change the concentration (1st order- double [ ] doubles rate, 2nd order – double[ ] quadruples rate, zero order- rate constant with any [ ] )

Page 45: Ch. 12-13

• Graphically:

• Plot concentration vs. time – identify which graph gives you a linear graph

– Zero Order: Linear Graph [A] vs time– 1st order: Linear graph ln[A] vs time– 2nd order: Linear graph 1/[A] vs. time

Page 46: Ch. 12-13

• Sum of the power to which all the reactant concentrations are raised (always defined in terms of reactant concentrations (no products))

• Overall order = a + b(exponents added together)

Page 47: Ch. 12-13

Finding overall Order

Ex. Rate = k [A] [B]2

Rate is 1st order for reactant ARate is 2nd order for reactant BOverall order =(a + b) = 3rd order

-if you double [A] = doubles rate-if you double [B] = quad. rate

Page 48: Ch. 12-13

Practice Problems• Rate Law:• Reaction:

– 2NO(g) + Cl2(g) 2 NOCl (g)

Page 49: Ch. 12-13

• Using the following data, calculate the rate law and constant.

[NO] [Cl2] Rate

(Δ[ ]/Δt)

0.10 0.10 0.18

0.10 0.20 0.36

0.20 0.20 1.45

Page 50: Ch. 12-13

• What is the rate law?• Rate = k [NO]2 [Cl2]• What is the order of the reaction

with respect to NO?• 2nd order

• What is the order of the reaction with respect to Cl2

• 1st order

Page 51: Ch. 12-13

• Using the data and rate law, calculate the rate constant.

• k = 180

• Assign: p 567 #21, #27 a,b #30 a, 39, 65 a,b

Page 52: Ch. 12-13

Equilibrium

-use for reversible reactions

Page 53: Ch. 12-13

Equilibrium

• Means a state of balance

• We will look at dynamic equilibrium – where changes are taking place but the overall balance is maintained (happening at the molecular level)

• Not Static equilibrium- where nothing is moving any more (see-saw)

Page 54: Ch. 12-13

• Use equilibrium w/ reversible reactions, where reactants convert to products and products convert to reactants simultaneously

• Ex. Equilibrium reaction2SO2(g) + O2(g) ↔ 2SO3 (g)

Can also use these symbols

↔,

Page 55: Ch. 12-13

2SO2(g) + O2(g) ↔ 2SO3 (g)

Steps:1. In a reversible rxn., the rate of the

reverse process is zero at the beginning. At that point no products are going back to reactants.

2. As the concentration of products build up, some products start converting to reactants (reverse rxn. starts)

Page 56: Ch. 12-13

2SO2(g) + O2(g) ↔ 2SO3 (g)

3. As reactants are used up their concentration decreases (forward reaction slows down)

4. As products build up, their concentration increases (reverse reaction speeds up)

5. Eventually the products are going to reactants at the same rate as the reactants are going to products; the rxn. has reached equilibrium

Page 57: Ch. 12-13

Chemical Equilibrium

• Forward & reverse reactions are taking place at same rate (no net change in actual amts. of products or reactants in the system)

Page 58: Ch. 12-13

2SO2(g) + O2(g) ↔ 2SO3 (g)

100

75

50

25

0

CONCENTRATION TIME

SO3

SO2

O2

(Have twice as much SO2 as O2 initially, then a mixture of 3 gases is obtained at equilibrium)

Page 59: Ch. 12-13

Equilibrium Position

• Given by relative concentration of reactants & products at equilibrium

• Doesn’t mean exactly 50%/50% concentration at equilibrium

• The position indicates what is favored at equilibrium

Page 60: Ch. 12-13

A B= product bond is weak and you have mostly reactants at equil.

A B = product bond is strong and you have mostly products at equil.

(larger arrow indicates the favored direction)

Page 61: Ch. 12-13

• Catalyst speed up the forward and reverse reactions equally (the activation energy is reduced by the same amount)

• Catalysts don’t affect the amts. of reactants or products present at equil. ( just decrease the time to get to equil.)

Page 62: Ch. 12-13

Equilibrium Constant (Keq)

• Use of constant is a concise way of stating whether reactants or products are favored in a rxn.

• The constant #’s relate the amt. of reactants to products at equil.

Page 63: Ch. 12-13

• Keq show the ratio of products to reactants

• If Keq > 1 products favored at equil. (spontaneous rxn)

• If Keq < 1 reactants favored at equil. (non-spontaneous rxn)

Page 64: Ch. 12-13

Ex. aA + bB cC + dD

(a) moles of reactant A react w/ (b) moles of reactant B and give (c) moles of product C and (d) moles of product D

Page 65: Ch. 12-13

Keq (equil. constant)=ratio of product concentrations to reactant concentrations w/ each concentration raised to a power given by the # of moles of that substance in the balanced chem. rxn.

-Keq is dependent on temp., as temp changes Keq changes

Page 66: Ch. 12-13

aA + bB cC + dD

Keq = [C]c x [D]d

[A]a x [B]b

Page 67: Ch. 12-13

H2 + I2 2HI

Write the Keq equation for this.

Keq = [HI]2

[H2] [I2]

Page 68: Ch. 12-13

N2O4 (g) 2 NO2 (g)

• This is a homogeneous equil.- all substances are in same phase

1. Write Keq equation:

Keq= [NO2]2

[N2O4]

Page 69: Ch. 12-13

N2O4 (g) 2 NO2 (g)

2. Calculate the Keq if:[NO2] = .0045 mol/L

[N2O4] = .030 mol/L

Keq= [NO2]2

[N2O4]

Keq = [.0045]2

.030

Keq = 6.8 x 10 -4

Page 70: Ch. 12-13

Keq = 6.8 x 10 -4

3. What is favored at equilibrium?

Reactants (Keq<1)

Page 71: Ch. 12-13

N2 (g) + O2(g) 2NO(g)

1. Write the Keq

Keq = [NO]2

[N2] [O2]

Page 72: Ch. 12-13

N2 (g) + O2(g) 2NO(g)

2. If [N2] and [O2] = .72 M and Keq = 4.6 x 10 –31. What is [NO]?

4.6 x 10-31 = [NO]2

[.72] [ .72]

2.38 x 10 –31 = [NO]2

4.9 x 10 –16 M = [NO]

Page 73: Ch. 12-13

Book problems

• P. 614 (new book)

• # 17, 21,22,23,37

• P 587 #24-26 (old book)

Page 74: Ch. 12-13

Le Chatelier’s Principledemo

• Delicate balance exists between reactants and products in a system at equilibrium

• If equil. conditions are changed – system shifts to restore equilibrium

• Any application of stress to the system disrupts the system

• Henri LeChatelier studied the changes in systems w/ stress application

Page 75: Ch. 12-13

LeChatelier’s Principle =

-if a stress is applied to a system in a dynamic equilibrium, the system changes to relieve the stress

-stress types: concentration, temperature, pressure

Page 76: Ch. 12-13

1. Changes in Concentration• Change amounts of reactants or

products • System changes to minimize the

original change

Page 77: Ch. 12-13

Ex. CO2 + H20 H2CO3

• Adding a reactant always pushes a reversible reaction in the direction of the products– Shifts reaction to right ()– Forms more product, uses up excess

reactants

Page 78: Ch. 12-13

Ex. CO2 + H20 H2CO3

• Removing a reactant always pulls a reversible rxn in the direction of the reactants– Shifts reaction to the left ()– Forms more reactants (less products)

Page 79: Ch. 12-13

Ex. CO2 + H20 H2CO3

• If product is added at equil. the reaction shifts to the formation of more reactants– Shifts to the left ()– Forms less product, more reactant

Page 80: Ch. 12-13

• If product is removed at equil. reaction shifts to direction of products– Shifts to the right ()– Forms more product, less reactant– Removal is a trick used by chemists to

increase the yield of a desired product (ex. Hens & eggs)

Page 81: Ch. 12-13

2. Change in temperature• Increasing the temperature causes

the equilibrium position of a reaction to shift in a direction that absorbs the heat energy

• Keq changes if temp. changes • Reversible rxns are endothermic in

one direction, exothermic in the other• Effect of a change depends on which

is endo

Page 82: Ch. 12-13

In a reaction

-addition of heat favors endo side

-removal of heat favors exo side

Page 83: Ch. 12-13

2SO2 + O2<-> 2SO3 + heat (kcal)

• Think of heat as a product exo direction(points towards heat) endo direction (points away from

heat)

• If I add heat– shifts away from heat to cool system (shifts left-toward reactants)

• If I cool – shifts towards heat (shifts right-toward products)

Page 84: Ch. 12-13

3. Change In Pressure• Affects gas phase only• Affects the number of moles• Similar effect as increasing

concentration of any gas• Le Chat. States that if the pressure

on an equilibrium system is changed the rxn. is driven in a direction that relieves that stress

Page 85: Ch. 12-13

• An increase in pressure (decreases volume) favors the side w/ the least moles

• A decrease in pressure (increases volume) favors the side w/ more moles

• If moles are equal on both sides- no pressure effect

Page 86: Ch. 12-13

Pressure Increase

PCl5 (g) <-> PCl3 (g) + Cl2(g)

1 mole 2 moles

- favors side w/ least moles

- Shifts toward left (reactants) PCl5 PCl3 Cl2

Page 87: Ch. 12-13

Pressure decrease

2PbS(s) +3O2(g)<->2PbO(s) +2SO2(g)

-look only at gases

3 moles 2 moles

-favors side w/ most moles

-shift toward left (reactants)

O2 SO2

Page 88: Ch. 12-13

test

• 18 multiple choice

• 4 short answer

• 2 calculations

• 3 essay