Title: Thermodynamics
1Thermodynamics
- Tells if a reaction will occur.
2Kinetics
- Tells how fast a reaction will occur.
3Reaction Rate
- Speed of the reaction.
- Found experimentally.
- Measure change in concentration of a reactant or
a product over time. - Rate ?Conc
- ?time
4How do you measure rates?
- Measure the concentration of 1 or more reactants
or products over time. - Reactants disappear
- Products appear
- The reaction rate is the change in concentration
of reactants products in a given amount of time.
5Concentration of Reactants, Products
Appearance of products
Disappearance of reactants
6How do reactions occur?
- Must have an effective collision between reacting
particles for reaction to occur. Collision
Theory - Collision must be energetic.
- Collision must occur at an effective angle.
7Particle Diagram of Collision
Activated complex or transition state.
Reactants
Products
NO O3 ? NO2 O2
Activated Complex is NOT in equation!
8Reaction Rates depend on
- The frequency of collisions how often they
occur - And
- The efficiency of the collisions what
percentage are effective
9Collision Theory
- Molecules must collide in order to react.
- Effective collisions lead to the formation of
products. - Ineffective collisions do not lead to products.
10Effective Collisions
- Energetic
- Favorable Orientation
11Effective vs. Ineffective Collision
12Most collisions are NOT effective!
13Why Do Collisions Have to be Energetic?
14Activation Energy Reaction
15Energy Diagram of a Reaction
Activated Complex
Reactants
Enthalpy or Potential Energy
Products
Reaction Pathway
16Activation Energy
- Energy needed to initiate the reaction.
- Energy needed to overcome the reaction barrier.
- The difference between the top of the hill
where you start. - Difference between activated complex reactants.
17Activation Energy
- Using a match to start a fire.
- The spark plug in a car engine.
18Potential Energy Curve Endothermic
Endothermic Reaction Products have more P.E.
than reactants. Start low, end high.
19Potential Energy Curve Exothermic
Exothermic Reaction Products have less P.E.
than reactants. Start high, end low.
20Have to label 6 energies on curve.
1)Ea Activation Energy 2)?H Hproducts
Hreactants
Potential Energy
216 Energies to Label
Label on both endo exo P.E. curves.
- P.E. of reactants
- P.E. of products
- P.E. of activated complex
- Ea for the forward reaction
- Ea for the reverse reaction
- ?H
22They mix the arrows up!
- You cant memorize them by location they move
them around. - Have to memorize them by where they start and
where they stop. - The 3 arrows for Potential Energy of start at
the baseline. - Eas start where you are end at the top of
the hill.
23Ea for reverse rxn
Ea for forward rxn
P.E. of activated complex
P.E. of products
P.E. of reactants
What kind of reaction is represented?
24?H of reaction
25Ea forward
Ea reverse
P.E. of reactants
P.E. of activated complex
P.E. of products
What kind of reaction is represented?
26?H of reaction
27Why does the collision have to be energetic?
- The kinetic energy of the reactants is used to
overcome the reaction barrier. - The kinetic energy is transformed into potential
energy.
28Factors that determine reaction rates
- Nature of the reactants (ions vs. molecules)
- Temperature
- Concentration
- Pressure (for gases)
- Surface Area
- The presence of a catalyst
29Nature of the reactantsIons or Molecules?
- Ions in solution react quickly.
- Covalently bonded molecules react slowly. It
takes time to break all those bonds! - 2 gas phase reactants tend to react more quickly
than 2 liquids or 2 solids.
30Temperature
- Rule of thumb
- Increasing the temperature 10oC doubles the
reaction rate.
31Temperature
- A measure of the average kinetic energy of the
molecules in a system. - The faster they are moving, the more often they
will collide. - The faster they are moving, the more energetic
the collisions.
32Maxwell-Boltzmann Distribution
33Increase in Temperature
- Increases the frequency of collisions
- Increases the percentage of collisions that lead
to reaction.
34Concentration
- Increase in concentration means more particles
per unit volume so more collisions in a given
amount of time.
35Pressure
- For systems involving gases.
- Analogous to increasing concentration.
- ? Pressure, ? number of particles per unit volume.
36Surface Area
- Higher surface area more particles exposed for
reaction. - Higher surface area means smaller particle size.
- (For heterogeneous reactions.)
37Vocabulary Interlude
- Homogeneous Reaction all reactants are in the
same phase. - Heterogeneous Reaction reactants are in
different phases.
38Catalyst
- Substance that increases the rate of reaction
without itself being consumed. - Provides an alternate reaction pathway with a
lower energy barrier.
39(No Transcript)
40Enzymes are catalysts!
41Catalytic Converter in Engines
42Hydrogenation Surface Catalysis
43Surface Science
44Reaction Mechanism
- A series of steps that leads from reactants to
products. - Describes how bonds break, atoms rearrange, and
bonds form in a reaction.
45Elementary Step
- Each individual step in a reaction mechanism.
- The slowest elementary step is called the
rate-determining step.
46P.E. Curve for Multi-Step Rxn