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3' CHEMICAL REACTION KINETICS

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Title: 3' CHEMICAL REACTION KINETICS


1
3. CHEMICAL REACTION KINETICS
  • One must wait until the evening to see how
    splendid the day has been.
  •                                  
                      -Sophocles

2
Contents
  • 3.1 The Law of Mass Action
  • 3.2 Rate Constants and Temperature
  • 3.3 Reaction Order and Testing Reaction Rate
    Expressions
  • 3.3.1 Zero-Order Reactions 3.3.2 First-Order
    Reactions
  • 3.3.3 Second-Order Reactions 3.3.4 Other
    Reaction Orders
  • 3.3.5 Michaelis-Menton Enzyme Kinetics
  • 3.4 Consecutive Reactions
  • 3.5 Reversible Reactions
  • 3.6 Parallel Reactions, Cycles and Food Webs
  • 3.7 Transition State Theory
  • 3.8 Linear Free-Energy Relationship
  • Problems

3
3.1 LAW OF MASS ACTION
  • 1867, Guldberg and Waage
  • The rate of a reaction is proportional to the
    product of the concentration of each substance
    participating in the reaction raised to the power
    of its stoichiometric coefficients
  • chemical concentration (activity) in
    solution
  • If the reaction proceeds to chemical equilibrium,
    the rate of the forward reaction becomes equal to
    the reverse reaction
  • The equilibrium constant

4
  • Elementary reactions occur in a single step
    the law of mass action holds
  • Simple unimolecular reaction where 1 mole of
    chemical A decomposes to form 1 mole of B
    irreversibly
  • Bimolecular elementary reactions
  • Trimolecular elementary reactions are less common
    and and more complicated stoichiometric equations
    than trimolecular do not occur.

5
3.2 RATE CONSTANTS AND TEMPERATURE
  • The rate constant carries its own units necessary
    to convert the mass law expression into a
    reaction rate
  • For the first-order decay reaction, the units on
    k are inverse time (T-1)
  • But for the 2nd-order reaction, k L3M-1T-1(L
    mol-1 s-1 or L mg-1 d-1)
  •  In Eyring's transition state theory, a reaction
    must overcome an activation energy before it can
    proceed. Figure 3.1 shows, that the reactant
    mixture has a certain energy content (internal
    energy) derived from its chemical potential at a
    given temperature and pressure. If the reaction
    occurs, the system proceeds through a peak in
    energy, a metastable transition state that may
    involve an activated complex (ABC)

6
Figure 3.1 Diagram for transition reaction A BC
? AB C. The free activation energy ?G is
necessary to form the activated complex ABC,
which is in equilibrium with the reactants. The
products ABC are formed from the dissociation of
ABC
7
  • Reaction rates increase with increasing
    temperature
  • Svante Arrhenius the relationship between the
    reaction rate constant and temperature
  • A is a constant that is characteristic of the
    reaction, Eact is the activation energy (J mol-1
    or cal mol-1), T is the absolute temperature in
    K, and R is the universal gas constant (8.314 J
    mol-1 K-1 or 1.987 cal J mol-1 K-1). A plot of ln
    k versus 1/T reveals the Eact from the slope of
    the straight line
  • If both temperatures are known in chemical
    reaction, the equations for k equated, and the
    constant A drops out as follows
  • Generally chemical reactions occur in the
    temperature range from 0 to 35 ? ? Eact/RT1T2
    constant, and the equation simplifies to
  • ? is a constant temperature coefficient gt 1.0 and
    usually within the range 1.0-1.10, and k20 is the
    rate constant at the reference temperature 20 ?

8
Figure 3.2 Arrhenius plot of reaction rate
constant at any temperature. Activation energies
for the reaction can be obtained from the slope
of the line.
Figure 3.3 Effect of temperature on reaction
rate.
9
Example 3.1 Effect of Temperature on Reaction
Rate Constants
  • The Q10 rule in biology states that for a 10?
    increase in temperature, the rate of the reaction
    will approximately double. Solve for the
    activation energy and q value necessary for a
    doubling of the reaction rate constant from 20 ?
    30 ?. .
  • Solution From the eqs proposed above,
  • Solving, we find
  • Solving for ?, we find

10
Table 3.1 Effect of Temperature on Reaction Rate
Constants
11
  • Enzymes are catalysts that speed the rate of
    reaction but are not consumed in the reaction.
  • S substrate, E enzyme, SE substrate-enzyme
    complex, P product
  • The role of the enzyme is to lower the activation
    energy of the reaction in Figure 3.1, resulting
    in a greater probability that reactants will
    interact successfully to form products.
  • Homogeneous catalysts are dissolved in the
    aqueous phase together with the reactants.
  • Heterogeneous catalysts are usually solid
    surfaces, and surface coordination reactions are
    one of the steps in the overall reaction. The
    surfaces bind a soluble reactant and create an
    activated complex.

Table 3.2 Catalysts in Selected Aquatic Chemical
Reactions
12
3.3 REACTION ORDER AND TESTING REACTION RATE
EXPRESSIONS
  • In the arbitrary reaction between species A, B,
    and C, the overall reaction order is defined as
    the sum of the exponents in the rate expression
    (a b c).
  • For a reaction rate that can be written as an
    elementary reaction
  • The overall reaction would be said to be of order
    a b c, but the reaction rate could also be
    said to be a order in reactant A, b order in
    reactant B, and c order in reactant C .
  • Most elementary reactions are either zero, first,
    or second order.
  • When reactions occur in a series of steps,
    fractional order reactions are observed.
  • Methods for estimating rate constant for these
    several kinds of reactions are described below.

13
3.3.1 Zero-Order Reactions
  • If we consider irreversible degradation, reaction
    rate does not depend on the concentration of
    reactant in solution. k is the rate constant of
    the zero-order reaction .
  • For a zero-order reaction, integration of the
    rate expression results in a straight line, and
    the rate constant k0 can be determined as the
    slope of the line.
  • From the results of the batch experiment, we can
    determine two important facts about the reaction.
    .
  • The proposed rate expression is correct if the
    line is straight (the measurements fall on a
    straight line to within some acceptable
    statistical limit). .
  • The rate constant can be obtained from the slope
    of the line.

14
3.3.2 First-Order Reactions
  • FOR the reaction rate is proportional to the
    concentration of the reactant to the first power
  • Solving the above equation for A by separation of
    varlables and integrating
  • Equation for B can also be integrated, but it is
    one ordinary differential equation with two
    unknowns (A and B). So, substituting for known A
    and solving,
  • The solution for exponential growth reaction

15
Figure 3.4 Summary of simple reaction kinetics
from batch reactor
16
  • Examples of FOR
  • Radioisotope decay.
  • Biochemical oxygen demand in a stream.
  • Sedimentation of noncoagulating solids.
  • Death and respiration rates for bacteria and
    algae.
  • Reaeration and gas transfer.
  • Log growth phase of algae and bacteria
    (production reaction).
  • Probably the only one that is "exactly" first
    order is radioisotope decay. But the other
    reactions may be sufficiently close to
    first-order reactions that we may assume the
    reaction mechanism as an approximation.

17
3.3.3 Second-Order Reactions
Autocatalytic
One-reactant
Two-reactants
  • For the second-order reaction with one reactant
  • Nonlinear ordinary differential equation
  • 1/A versus time will yield a straight line with a
    slope of k2.
  • Second-order reaction with two reactants
  • A plot of ln(A/B) versus time should yield a
    straight line with the slope of -k2(B0 A0)

18
Figure 3.4 Summary of simple reaction kinetics
from batch reactor
19
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20
3.3.4 Other Reaction Orders
  • N-order reaction
  • If the reaction is not elementary but multi-step
    one, It may be fractional order (0 lt n lt 1) or
    some other noninteger order. Fractional order
    kinetics occur in precipitation and dissolution
    reactions.
  • For example, in the dissolution of oxides and
    aluminosilicate minerals during chemical
    weathering, the reaction is surface-controlled by
    the slow detachment of the central metal ion
    (activated complex) into solution .
  • ?OH hydrous oxide or aluminosilicate mineral z
    charge on the central metal ion and the number
    of protons bound to the central metal atom M
    central metal ion of valence z ? renewed
    surface
  • 0ltmlt1, mnxz

21
3.3.5 Michaelis-Menton Enzyme Kinetics
  • Enzyme kinetics often result in rather
    complicated rate expressions. The classic case of
    Michaelis-Menton enzyme kinetics follows a
    two-step reaction mechanism as follows.
  • E is the enzyme, S is the substrate, ES is the
    enzyme-substrate complex, and P is the product of
    the reaction.
  • Note that the enzyme is a catalyst that speeds
    the rate of the reaction (lowers the activation
    energy) but is not consumed in the reaction.
  • The rate of formation of ES complex
  • Rate of formation of products is first order in
    the ES complex.  
  • Steady state dES/dt 0, k3 ltlt k2

22
  • Total enzyme in the system (E ES) ? E ET ES
  • The total enzyme ET is seen to increase the rate
    of the reaction (catalyze it), but it is not
    consumed in the reaction. The formation rate of
    product increases with increasing ET
    concentration. .
  • If the product P is cellular synthesis (cell
    biomass), then k3ET represents the maximum
    growth rate of the product, and we obtain the
    final expression for Michaelis-Menton kinetics
  • µmax the maximum growth rate of the product
    (cells)
  • The reaction rate expression in the above
    equation is intermediate between the 1st and 2nd
    order cases. . At low substrate concentrations
    (Sltlt KM), it is second order overall. At high
    substrate concentrations (SgtgtKM) it is first
    order overall and represents a log-growth phase.

23
  • The growth rate is a maximum when SgtgtKM (the
    substrate concentration is very large), and it is
    first order with respect to substrate
    concentration for small substrate concentrations.
    Figure 3.5 is a plot of the growth rate  as a
    function of substrate concentration.

24
Figure 3.5 Michaelis-Menton enzyme kinetics
showing maximum growth rate µmax and
half-saturation constant (Michaelis constant) KM.
25
Figure 3.6 Lineweaver-Burk plot to linearize
data using Michaelis-Menton enzyme kinetics to
obtain the parameters µmax and KM. It is a
double-reciprocal plot of growth rate and
substrate concentration.
26
3.4 CONSECUTIVE REACTIONS
  • Nitrification and carbonaceous biochemical oxygen
    demand (CBOD) in a stream are examples, where D
    is the dissolved oxygen deficit that is created
    when CBOD exerts itself. Ammonia-nitrogen is
    oxidized to nitrite-nitrogen, which is, in turn,
    oxidized to nitrate-nitrogen. Because etch
    species is expressed in terms of nitrogen, the
    stoichiometric coefficients are unity. Bacteria
    catalyze the reactions in the above equations.
    For consecutive nitrification reactions,
    Nitrosomonas spp. mediate the first reaction and
    Nitrobacter spp. mediate the second reaction. The
    overall balanced chemical action for
    nitrification is
  • 1 mole of ammonia combines with 2 moles of oxygen
    to form 1 mole of nitrate, overall. On a mass
    basis, 1.0 gram of ammonia-nitrogen consumes 4.57
    grams of oxygen to form 1.0 gram of
    nitrate-nitrogen.
  • A is the ammonia-nitrogen concentration, B is the
    nitrite-nitrogen concentration, and C is the
    nitrate-nitrogen concentration. The above
    equations represent a set of three ordinary
    differential equations that must be solved
    simultaneously

27
  • The concentration of biodegradable organic
    material can be measured using a biochemical
    oxygen demand test. It measures the concentration
    of dissolved oxygen that is consumed via
    microbial oxidation of the organics. This process
    results in a dissolved oxygen deficit in
    equation (52). The deficit, in turn, reaerates
    away due to the absorption of oxygen from the
    atmosphere to the stream. Instead of forming a
    product, the deficit goes to zero as atmospheric
    reaeration proceeds to chemical equilibrium
    (saturation).
  • (????).

Csat is the saturated concentration of dissolved
oxygen in equilibrium with the atmosphere, and
D.O. is the dissolved oxygen concentration. Csat
depends on temperature and salinity of the water
body.
  • To solve the above simultaneous equations, we
    must start from ammonia-nitrogen equation.
  • Substitute A concentration into the
    ammonia-nitrogen equation
  • Solving equation for B by integration factor
  • p(t) is integrating factor, q(t) is
    nonhomogeneous forcing function
  • yy0 at t0

28
  • The above equation can be the classic D.O. sag
    curve of Streeter-Phelps.
  • Solution for nitrate can be found by the
    following equation. NT is the total moles of
    species A, B, and C or the sum of their initial
    concentrations
  • k1 can be obtained from a semilogarithmic plot ln
    A versus t.
  • k2 can be estimated by using experimental data in
    nonlinear least-squares fit. It also can be found
    through the following equation.

29
Figure 3.7 Concentration of ammonia-nitrogen,
nitrite-nitrogen, nitrate-nitrogen versus time in
nitrification reaction
30
3.5 REVERSIBLE REACTIONS
  • Many physical chemical reactions that occur in
    nature are results of forward and reverse
    reactions coming into a chemical equilibrium.
    Some examples of reversible reaction are
    acid-base reactions, gas transfer,
    adsorption-desorption, bio concentration-depuratio
    n

The total concentration of chemical is constant
throughout time.
  • Reaction rate
  • It is solvable by the integration factor method
    or by the use of integration tables and
    separation of variables.
  • At steady state the equilibrium is reached dA/dt
    0
  • B and A are steady-state concentrations and
    Keq is the equilibrium constant
  • We can obtain solution for A at t 8

31
Figure 3.8 Reversible reaction showing the
mixture of products and reactants at chemical
equilibrium (t 8)
32
3.6 PARALLEL REACTIONS, CYCLES, AND FOOD WEBS
  • In the nitrification of ammonia, parallel
    reactions might include the uptake of ammonia by
    algae and the stripping of ammonia from the water
    body to the atmosphere at high pH.
  • The pathway that ammonia disappears from the
    environment, then, depends on the relative
    magnitude of the rate constants k1, k3, and k4. A
    rate expression must include all three reactions
  • Sulfur cycle five state variables and eight
    reactions.

33
Figure 3.9 The example of elemental cycle
sulfur cycle. Each reaction has a rate constant
and reaction rate expression.
34
  • Heavy metals, nitrogen, carbon, sulfur, and
    phosphorus are elemental cycles that can be
    modeled at the microscale, mesoscale, or even
    global scale using chemical reaction kinetics.
  • Food webs are similar to elemental cycles for
    carbon or biomass. In a lake, one might be
    interested in modeling the transport and
    transformation of a contaminant (e.g.,
    polychlorinated biphenyls or PCBs) as they move
    through the aquatic food web, etc.
  • The entire system is driven by primary production
    involving photosynthesis (the sun's energy) and
    the uptake of carbon dioxide by algae and rooted
    plants.

35
Figure 3.10 Food web of an ecosystem
demonstrates the interconnectedness and cycling
of elements in natural waters.
36
3.7 TRANSITION STATE THEORY
  • Transition state theory considers the free-energy
    requirements of a chemical reaction.
  • Rate expressions based on transition state theory
    provide an important bridge between
    thermodynamics (energetics and equilibrium
    reactions of Ch.4) and rates of reactions
    (kinetics in Ch. 3).
  • Formation of activated complex
  • Dissociating into products, irreversibly
  • The higher the activation energy (standard free
    energy of activation), the less is the
    probability that the reaction occurs, and the
    smaller is the rate of reaction. kB is
    Boltzmanns constatn (1.38x10-23 K-1), h is
    Plancks constant (6.63x10-34 J s-1), T is is the
    absolute temperature (K).

37
  • The activated complex, ABC, is in equilibrium
    with the reactants
  • Using this constant, the reaction rate is
  • The standard free energy of activation is defined
    as
  • The rate constant
  • From thermodynamics
  • ?H is the standard enthalpy of activation, and
    ?S is the standard entropy of activation.

38
3.8 LINEAR FREE-ENERGY RELATIONSHIPS
  • Quantitative relation can be established between
    reaction rate constant and equilibrium constant.
    For two related reactions, the following
    relationship can be established
  • Linear free energy relation in terms of
    thermodynamics
  • ?G2 and ?G1 - free activation energies, ?G2o
    and ?G1o free energies of the related
    reactions. For a series of i reactants, the final
    linear free energy relationships are
  • a the slope of the linear plot, ß the
    intercept.

39
  • Figure 3.11 Linear free-energy relationship for
    the oxidation of various Fe(II) species (Fe2,
    FeOH, and Fe(OH)20) with O2(aq) and the
    equlilbrium constant for the reaction
  • the rate expressions follow the law of mass
    action as the product of the Fe(II) species times
    the molar oxygen concentration in solution
  • Three points representing the rate constant
    versus the equilibrium constant for the reactions
    are shown. The rate constant in each case is
    defined by

40
Assignments
  • Derive the analytical solution of 0, 1, 2,
    catalyst, and nth order reactions.
  • Derive the solution of three simultaneous
    equations of nitrification.
  • Explain the D. O. Sag Curve using the above
    solution.
  • Explain the theory of transition state and the
    relation of linear free energy.
  • Explain the activation energy in terms of
    enthalpy and entropy.
  • Explain all the models in my web site.
  • Explain p7, p8, and p9 in groundwater textbook.
  • Make the English table for composite multiphase
    groundwater model.
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