Reaction rate
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The reaction rate for a reactant or product in a particular reaction is defined as the amount of the chemical that is formed or removed (in moles or mass units) per unit time per unit volume. Knowledge of these rates is essential in, among other disciplines, chemical engineering and environmental engineering. Chemical kinetics is the part of physical chemistry which studies reaction rates.
Factors influencing rate of reaction
There are several factors that affect the rate of reaction:
- Temperature: Conducting a reaction at a higher temperature puts more energy into the system and increases the reaction rate. The influence of temperature is described by the Arrhenius equation, whose result is factored into the equation by k. As a rule of thumb, the reaction rate doubles for every 10 degrees Celsius increase in temperature. However, if a reaction is exothermic a rise in temperature can slow the rate of reaction.
- Concentration: As reactant concentration increases, the frequency of collision increases and so therefore does the frequency of collisions having sufficient energy to cause reaction.
- Pressure: The rate of gaseous reactions usually increases with an increase in pressure. Increase in pressure in fact is equivalent to an increase in concentration of the gas.
- Light: Light is a form of energy. It may affect the rate or even course of a reaction. For example when methane reacts with chlorine in the dark, the reaction rate is very low. It can be sped up when the mixture is put under diffused light. In bright sunlight, the reaction is explosive.
- Order: The order of the reaction has a major effect on its rate. The order of a reaction is found experimentally, and, for most basic reactions, is an integer value.
- A catalyst: The presence of a catalyst increases the reaction rate in both the forward and reverse reactions by providing an alternative pathway with a lower activation energy.
- The nature of the reactants: If a reaction involves the breaking and reforming of bonds (complex) compared to just the forming of bonds (simple) then it generally takes longer. The reactants position in the reactivity series also affects reaction rate.
- Surface Area: In reactions on surfaces, which take place during heterogeneous catalysis, the rate of reaction increases as the surface area does. The larger the surface area compared to the volume, the faster a reaction can take place, as more simultaneous reactions can occur.
Rate law
For a chemical reaction n A + m B → C + D, the rate equation or rate law is a mathematical expression used in chemical kinetics to link the rate of a reaction to the concentration of each reactant and their various orders.
- [\frac = k(T)[A]^[B]^]
In this equation k(T) is the reaction rate coefficient or rate constant, although it is not really a constant, because it includes everything that affects reaction rate outside concentration: mainly temperature but also ionic strength or light irradiation.
The exponents n and m are called orders and depend on the reaction mechanism.
Temperature dependence
Each reaction rate coefficient k (i.e., k1 and k2) has a temperature dependency, which is usually given by the Arrhenius equation:
- [ k = A e^ }]
The values for A and Ea are dependent on the reaction (so, for example, they may differ between k1 and k2). There are also more complex equations possible, which describe temperature dependence of other rate constants which do not follow this pattern.
Example
For the reaction- [ 2H_2 (g) + 2 NO(g) \rarr N_2 (g) + 2 H_2O (g)]
- [ r = k [H_2][NO]^2 \,]
As can be seen, the rate equation does not simply reflect the reactants - In kinetics the overall reaction can be proposed to occur through a number of elementary steps as follows, all the steps of a proposed mechanism (elemetary steps accounting for the overall equation) must be looked at, this reaction has three proposed mechanisms as follow:
- [ 2 NO \ \overrightarrow\longleftarrow \ N_2O_2] (fast equilibrium)
- [N_2O_2 + H_2 \rarr N_2O + H_2O ] (slow)
- [N_2O + H_2 \rarr N_2 + H_2O ] (fast)
See also
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