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Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part 2b: rates

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Page 1: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry

Part 2b: rates

Page 2: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

Kinetics

How fast does a reaction go? (and why?)

Solution of crystal violet poured into solution of NaOH.

Page 3: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

What is crystal violet?

Large organic molecule, deep purple.Also known as "Gram's stain", used to distinguish

types of bacteria ("Gram-negative" and "Gram-positive").

Disinfectant and toxic! Do not get on skin!

Page 4: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

What is crystal violet?

+

CV+

Page 5: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

How does it react with OH- ?

++

-

CV+ OH-

Page 6: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

How does it react with OH- ?

++

-

CV+ OH- CVOH

deep purple colorless

Page 7: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

Following the progressof the reaction

• Visually: color changes:purple pink colorless

• Quantitative: colorimetry

measure transmitted light

Page 8: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

Colorimetry

Law of Lambert-Beer

more convenient:use Absorbance A:

I0 It

ΔxZct eII ][

0

tIIA 0log AkZ ][

Page 9: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

Following the progressof the reaction

t [CV+]s mol/L

0.0 5.00E-05

10.0 3.68E-05

20.0 2.71E-05

30.0 1.99E-05

40.0 1.46E-05

50.0 1.08E-05

60.0 7.93E-06

80.0 4.29E-06

100.0 2.32E-06

0.00E+00

1.00E-05

2.00E-05

3.00E-05

4.00E-05

5.00E-05

6.00E-05

0.0 20.0 40.0 60.0 80.0 100.0

t (s)

[CV+

] (m

ol/L

)

Page 10: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

What is a rate ?The rate of a chemical reaction is the speed at which

it transforms reagents into products.It is a measure of how fast things change with time.Compare with the speed of a car: measures how fast

its position changes with time.

In chemistry we look at concentrations and changes in them.

txspeed

tZrate

][

A heterogeneous reaction

Page 11: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

Calculating rates

0.00E+00

1.00E-05

2.00E-05

3.00E-05

4.00E-05

5.00E-05

6.00E-05

0.0 20.0 40.0 60.0 80.0 100.0

t (s)

[CV+

] (m

ol/L

)

0.00E+00

1.00E-05

2.00E-05

4.00E-05

5.00E-05

0.0 20.0 40.0 60.0

t (s)[C

V+](

mol

/L)

}{t

[CV]

tCVrate

][

t large: average rate over interval tt very small: instantaneous rate

note the "-" sign!

average rate overt = 10 .. 20 s

Page 12: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

Decrease of concentration follows a smooth curve.

At each point, the rate is the (negative of the) slope of the curve.

Average and instantaneous rates

0.00E+00

1.00E-05

2.00E-05

3.00E-05

4.00E-05

5.00E-05

6.00E-05

0.0 20.0 40.0 60.0 80.0 100.0

t (s)

[CV+

] (m

ol/L

)

Page 13: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

Average and instantaneous rates

We cannot measure rates directly.We can only measure concentrations.Rates can be estimated• by drawing a smooth curve and estimating the

slopes (tangents)• by using average rates over real (but small) time

intervals

Page 14: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

Average and instantaneous rates

The instantaneous rate is givenby the slope (tangent)

t (s)

{[CV]

}

t t0.00E+00

3.00E -05

4.00E -05

5.00E -05

6.00E -05

0.0 60.0 80.0 100.0

[CV+

] (m

ol/L

) {[CV]

}

11-6

5

sLmol10*10.16.3310*70.3][)0.10(

tCVrate

11-7

5

sLmol10*4.10.8010*12.1][)0.80(

tCVrate

Page 15: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

Average and instantaneous rates

The average rate over a larger intervaldiffers significantly from the instantaneous rates.

0.00E +00

1.00E -05

3.00E -05

4.00E -05

5.00E -05

6.00E -05

0.0 20.0 60.0 80.0 100.0

t (s)

[CV+

] (m

ol/L

) {[CV]

}

t

11-6

5

sLmol10*10.16.3310*70.3][)0.10(

tCVrate

11-7

5

sLmol10*4.10.8010*12.1][)0.80(

tCVrate

1-1-7

5

sLmol10*7.40.7010*27.3][)0.80..0.10(

tCVrateav

Page 16: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

Following the progressof the reaction

t [CV+] av rates mol/L mol L-1s-1

0.0 5.00E-051.32E-06

10.0 3.68E-059.70E-07

20.0 2.71E-057.20E-07

30.0 1.99E-055.30E-07

40.0 1.46E-053.80E-07

50.0 1.08E-052.87E-07

60.0 7.93E-061.82E-07

80.0 4.29E-069.85E-08

100.0 2.32E-06

0.00E+00

1.00E-05

2.00E-05

3.00E-05

4.00E-05

5.00E-05

6.00E-05

0.0 20.0 40.0 60.0 80.0 100.0

t (s)

[CV+

] (m

ol/L

)

Page 17: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

Rates depend on concentrationsFrom the table for Crystal Violet

we can plot rate vs concentration:

Looks pretty linear.The rate law is:

rate = k [CV+]with:

k = 2.68*10-2 s-1

(the rate constant).0.00E+00

2.00E-07

4.00E-07

6.00E-07

8.00E-07

1.00E-06

1.20E-06

1.40E-06

1.60E-06

1.80E-06

0.00E+00 1.00E-05 2.00E-05 3.00E-05 4.00E-05 5.00E-05 6.00E-05 7.00E-05

[CV+] (mol/L)

av ra

te (m

ol L

-1 s

-1)

Another rate law determination

Page 18: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

It is not always this easy

Here we could get a set of rates from a single experiment.

Often this cannot be done: you have to stop the reaction to analyze the results.

Start reaction, stop it after a short interval, analyze.Do this for a number of initial concentrations

obtain a number of initial rates.Need lots of experiments to get accurate curves!

Page 19: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

Using initial ratesC0 = 5.00e-5 mol/L

0.00E+00

1.00E-05

2.00E-05

3.00E-05

4.00E-05

5.00E-05

6.00E-05

0 20 40 60 80

C0 = 3.00e-5 mol/L

0.00E+00

1.00E-05

2.00E-05

3.00E-05

4.00E-05

5.00E-05

6.00E-05

0 20 40 60 80

C0 = 1.00e-5 mol/L

0.00E+00

1.00E-05

2.00E-05

3.00E-05

4.00E-05

5.00E-05

6.00E-05

0 20 40 60 80

Initial conc Conc after 1 s Initial rate5.00E-05 4.89E-05 1.14E-06

4.00E-05 3.91E-05 9.10E-073.00E-05 2.93E-05 6.82E-072.50E-05 2.44E-05 5.68E-072.00E-05 1.95E-05 4.55E-071.50E-05 1.47E-05 3.41E-071.00E-05 9.77E-06 2.27E-07 0.00E+00

2.00E-07

4.00E-07

6.00E-07

8.00E-07

1.00E-06

1.20E-06

1.40E-06

1.60E-06

0.00E+00 2.00E-05 4.00E-05 6.00E-05 8.00E-05

C0 (mol/L)

initi

al ra

te (m

ol L

-1 s

-1)

Page 20: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

More complicated rate laws

2 NO + O2 2 NO2

expt [NO] [O2] initial rate

1 0.02 0.01 0.028

2 0.02 0.02 0.057

3 0.02 0.04 0.114

4 0.04 0.02 0.227

5 0.01 0.02 0.014

Page 21: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

More complicated rate laws

2 NO + O2 2 NO2

expt [NO] [O2] initial rate

1 0.02 0.01 0.028

2 0.02 0.02 0.057

3 0.02 0.04 0.114

4 0.04 0.02 0.227

5 0.01 0.02 0.014

0

0.02

0.04

0.06

0.08

0.1

0.12

0.14

0.16

0 0.01 0.02 0.03 0.04 0.05 0.06

[O2]

initi

al ra

te

linear in [O2]

etcraterate

)1(2

)2(2

]O[]O[

04.2028.0057.0

)1()2(

rate [O2]

Page 22: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

More complicated rate laws

2 NO + O2 2 NO2

expt [NO] [O2] initial rate

1 0.02 0.01 0.028

2 0.02 0.02 0.057

3 0.02 0.04 0.114

4 0.04 0.02 0.227

5 0.01 0.02 0.014

0

0.05

0.1

0.15

0.2

0.25

0 0.01 0.02 0.03 0.04 0.05

[NO]

initi

al ra

te

definitely not linear in [NO] !

etcraterate

2

)2(

)4(

]NO[]NO[

98.3057.0227.0

)2()4(

quadratic ???

Page 23: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

More complicated rate laws

2 NO + O2 2 NO2

expt [NO] [O2] initial rate

1 0.02 0.01 0.028

2 0.02 0.02 0.057

3 0.02 0.04 0.114

4 0.04 0.02 0.227

5 0.01 0.02 0.014

quadratic (second-order) in [NO]

0

0.05

0.1

0.15

0.2

0.25

0.3

0.35

0.4

0 0.0005 0.001 0.0015 0.002 0.0025 0.003

[NO]^2

initi

al ra

te

rate [NO]2

Page 24: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

Putting it all together

2 NO + O2 2 NO2So we have

rate [O2] ([NO] constant)rate [NO]2 ([O2] constant)

Combining these givesrate = k [O2][NO]2

withk = 7069 L2mol-2s-1

Reaction is:•first-order in O2

•second-order in NO•third-order overall

expt [NO] [O2] initial rate est k1 0.02 0.01 0.028 70002 0.02 0.02 0.057 71253 0.02 0.04 0.114 71254 0.04 0.02 0.227 70945 0.01 0.02 0.014 7000

est k = rate/([O2][NO]2)

Page 25: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

What do we mean by "the rate" ?

2 NO + O2 2 NO2

For every single molecule of O2, two molecules of NO are consumed and two molecules of NO2 are produced.

"The rate" of the reaction is defined as

contains every component divided by its coefficient in the balanced reaction equation.

tttrate

]NO[

21]O[]NO[

21 22

Page 26: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

Stoichiometry and rate laws

Rate laws can not be deduced from the balanced reaction equation!

They must be measured experimentally.The results are not always intuitive.

NO2 + CO NO + CO2

rate = k [NO2]2

Consequences of a rate law

Page 27: Chem 1310: Introduction to physical chemistry Part …home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~budzelaa/CHEM1310/Lectures/C… · PPT file · Web view2007-01-22 · Chem 1310: Introduction to physical

Stoichiometry and rate laws

You can even have non-integer orders:

C CCH3

CH3H

HC C

CH3

HH

CH3(cat I2)

trans-2-butene cis-2-butene

rate(cistrans) = k [cis-2-butene][I2]½

first-order in cis-2-butenehalf-order in I2 A more complicated rate law