MOLECULAR
REACTION DYNAMICS
kinetics 3
reaction dynamics
@ Recall:
= temperature dependence of reaction rates
Arrhenius equation Ea
k Ae
Ea/RT
or ln k ln A
RT
= some - not Arrhenius - like
whose activation energy Ea may be
defined:
lnk
Ea RT
2
T V dlnk
or Ea R
d(1/T)
reaction dynamics
Arrhenius equation
pre-exponential factor A
= measure of the rate at which collisions occur
product of A and the exponential eEa/RT
= the rate of successful collisions
collision theory
Collision Theory
basis:
= particles collide with a frequency calculated
from the kinetic theory of gases,
= reaction occurs if the collision is sufficiently
energetic
Gas - phase reaction :
- collision theory assumes that the reaction rate is
proportional to
collision theory
(a) the frequency of reactant collision
(= frequency collision, Z)
(b) the probability that the collision is energetic
* effective collision - occur with a kinetic
energy along the direction of approach
of at least Ea
frequency calculated from kinetic
theory of gases
* according to the Boltzmann distribution
= at a given T, the proportion of each
collisions is eEa/RT
collision theory
consider the gaseous reaction:
A + B product
- the reaction rate is of the form :
if r = k[A][B] = rate = z e-Ea/RT
and z = k’[A][B] = (k/e-Ea/RT) [A][B]
= k eEa/RT[A][B]
= it becomes identical to the Arrhenius
equation
collision theory
conclusion:
= the Arrhenius temperature dependence of rate
coefficients reflects the number of encounters
that are sufficiently energetic to lead to reaction
@ the higher the temperature the greater the
proportion of vigorous encounters
collision theory
Basic calculations
* if zAB = the number of A and B collisions per unit
time per unit volume
collision density or frequency
* then: the rate of change of the number of A
particles per unit volume is equal to zAB
multiplied by the proportion of collisions that
occur with a kinetic energy along the line of
approach in excess of some threshold value,
Ea’
collision theory
the rate of concentration (molar) change of A is
= rate law (r = z e-Ea/RT ) divided by the
Avogadro’s constant, NA
d[A]
zAB eEa/RT
dt NA
and, the collision frequency, zAB is given as,
æ 8kT ö1/2 2
=
z AB çs ÷ (NA ) [A][B]
è pm ø
where: = collision cross-section
= (RA + RB)2
1/ = 1/mA + 1/mB
collision theory
from collision theory:
= rate of change in [A] per unit time
d[A] zAB f
dt NA
where,
f = fraction of collision, f = eEa/RT
* therefore,
1/2
d[A] 8kT
NA [ A ][B ] e
Ea/RT
dt
by definition - a simple binary reaction,
d[A]
ka [ A ][B ]
dt
collision theory
* then,
1/2
8kT
ka
NA e
Ea/RT
form of the Arrhenius equation
* as long as the experimental T dependence
dominates the weak square root T
dependence of the pre-exponential
factor (A)
collision theory
From the general definition of activation energy -
lnk
Ea RT
2
Ea' 21 RT
T V
* shows that the activation energy is weakly
temperature dependent
* generally, Ea’ is much larger than ½RT
1/2
8kT
collision theory ka
NA e
Ea/RT
calculated rate coefficients
* simplest method = use for the values of non-
reactive collisions
discrepancies between experimental and
calculated results vary:
(1) experimental values are smaller than the
calculated values -
* suggests:
- collision energy = not the only criterion for
reaction
- relative orientation of the colliding species is
important
collision theory
(2) experimental values are larger than the
calculated values -
* indicates:
- reaction occurs more quickly than the
particles collide
- distance of approach needed is quite
different
- cannot use for non-reactive collision
collision theory
Steric requirement
- replacing in the equation
1/2
8kT
ka * NA e
Ea/RT
by * = called the reactive cross-section
introduces the stearic factor, P
* = P
collision theory
therefore,
1/2
8kT
ka *
NA e
Ea/RT
and
8kT
1/2
ka P NA e
Ea/RT
* shows three contributions to the rate
coefficient
collision theory
@ three (3) contributions to the rate coefficient:
(1) steric factor, P = which take care of the local
properties of the reaction
(2) transport factor = which governs - how often
the particle come together
(3) energy criterion
collision theory
the theory would be very well if we could calculate
the steric factor
- in some cases we can:
example: reaction K + Br2 KBr + Br
P = 4.8 “anomalously” large reaction
cross-section,
* = 4.8
* proposed that the reaction proceeds by a
harpoon mechanism
collision theory
harpoon mechanism model
- imagine K atoms approaching the Br2 molecule
- when close enough, an electron flips
neutral molecules 2 ions are formed
* three (3) energy contributions
(for the process: K + Br2 KBr + Br )
(1) ionization energy of K
(2) electron affinity energy of Br2
(3) coulombic interaction energy between ions
- product formation
collision theory
Diffusion-controlled reactions (reactions in
solution)
* reactions in solution occur differently than in the
gaseous phase
= particles travel through the solvent particle
encounter frequency is much less than in a
gas
= however, since particles migrate slowly
collision theory
= however, since particles migrate slowly
two (2) particles encountering each other
will stay near each other much longer
therefore, increased chances of reaction
- but activation energy of the reaction is much more
complicated
because the pair is surrounded by solvent
How diffusion affects the rate of reaction
collision theory
consider the reaction encounter pair AB
kd ‘ A + B
A + B kd AB
k P
= 2nd order in reactants A and B
rate of formation :
d[A]
kd [ A ][B ]
dt
collision theory
the encounter pair
(1) can break up without reaction:
AB A + B d[AB]
kd ' [ AB ]
dt
(2) can go on to form the product:
AB P d[AB]
k [ AB ]
dt
* the steady-state concentration of AB
d[AB]
kd [ A ][B ] kd ' [ AB ] k [ AB ] 0
dt
collision theory
solving for [AB],
kd
[AB] [ A ][B ]
k d ' k
the overall rate law for the formation of products:
d[P]
k [ AB ] k eff [ A ][B ]
dt
kk
keff
d
where
k d ' k
collision theory
Two (2) limiting cases
Case I: rate of break up of the pair = slower than
the rate product formation
kd’ << k
kk
thus, keff
d
k
* with this limit:
- the rate of reaction is governed by the rate at
which the reactant particles diffuse
through the medium
= called: diffusion-controlled limit
and the reaction is diffusion controlled
collision theory
Case II: substantial activation energy is involved
in the reaction of A and B
k << kd
thus, kk
keff
d
kd ' K = equilibrium constant
* with this limit:
- the reaction rate depends on the accumulation
of energy in the encounter pair - due to
its interaction with the surrounding
solvent
= called: activation-controlled reaction
collision theory
Diffusion and Reaction (diffusion of B towards A)
= rate of a diffusion-controlled reaction can
be calculated by considering the rate at
which the reactants diffuse together
Consider: stationary particle
A in a solvent containing
B particles
- - imaginary sphere of
radius r surrounds
particle A
- - particles B outside this
sphere
D=DA +DB
Reaction occurs at R*
collision theory
from Fick’s first law of diffusion,
= the flux is proportional to the concentration
gradient (towards A)
d[B]
* J (flow) = 4r2 J = 4r2DBNA
dr
where, DB = diffusion coefficient of B
collision theory
two information needed:
(1) when r is infinite
= the conc. of B is the same as the bulk conc.
(2) the flow through a shell is the same whatever
the radius
= no reaction occurs until A and B touch
* thus, under steady-state conditions,
J = is a constant independent of r
so,
collision theory
suppose R* = critical distance
= reactants touch and reaction occurs with the
destruction of B
Thus, when r = R*, [B]r = 0
therefore substituting into equation,
The following expression for the flow of B towards A
is obtained,
J = 4RB*NA[B]
* flow: average number of B particles per unit time
passing through any spherical surface centered
on any A
collision theory
the rate of the diffusion-controlled reaction is equal
to the average flow of B particles to all the A
particles in the sample
* if the bulk concentration of A is [A]
- the number of A in the sample of volume V
= NA[A]V
so, the global flow of all B to all A is equal to
JNA[A]V = 4R*DBNA2 [A][B]V
= this is the flow in terms of the numbers of B
collision theory
it is unrealistic to suppose that all A are stationary
= replace DB by D = DA + DB
Then,
the rate of change of concentration of AB is:
d[AB]
4R *DNA [ A ][B ]
dt
* by comparison with the rate law expression,
kd = 4R*DNA
d[AB]
= kd [ A ][B ]
dt
collision theory
incorporating the Stokes-Einstein relation for each
particle
kT kT
DA DB
6R A 6RB
where RA and RB are effective hydrodynamic radii
= since this relation is an approximation, little extra
error is introduced if we write,
RA = RB = ½R*
this leads us to:
8kTN 8RT From kd = 4R*DNA
kd
A
3 3
collision theory
this approximation shows that
8kTN 8RT
kd
A
* the rate constant is : 3 3
- independent of the identities of the
reactants
- dependent only on the temperature and
the viscosity of the solvent
activated complex theory
Activated Complex Theory (ACT)
the advantage over Collision Theory :
- a quantity corresponding to the steric factor
(P) appears automatically
* ACT: attempts to identify the principal features
governs the size of the rate reaction
a model of the events that take place during the
reaction
activate complex theory
reaction profile
* consider the reaction: A + B products
generally features: how the energy of the
reactants change in the course of a simple
bimolecular reaction
* potential energy rises to a maximum then falls
down forming the products
activate complex theory
activate complex theory
ACT :
= pictures a reaction between A and B - through
the formation of an activated complex, C‡
A + B = C‡
* this activated complex falls apart by
unimolecular decay to form the products
C‡ k‡ P
@ rate = k‡[ C‡]
problems: (1) find k‡
(2) concentration of C‡
activate complex theory
activated complex concentration
= proportional to the concentration of the reactants
C‡ [A][B] C‡ = K‡[A][B]
* therefore,
d[P]
rate keff [ A ][B ]
dt
where keff = k‡K‡
? how do we calculate for these two constant ?
activate complex theory
Rate of decay of the activated complex
* activated complex forms products if it
passes the transition state
* the rate of passage of the complex through the
transition state
the vibrational frequency along the reaction
coordinate (rate of decay of transition state)
or
k‡ =
activate complex theory
concentration of the activated complex
- to determine the activated complex conc.
= assume: a pre-equilibrium between
reactants and the complex,
A + B = C‡
pC
KP
pA pB
if pX = RT[X]
C K RT A B
P
activate complex theory
by comparison: K‡ = RT Kp
* from equilibrium constant discussion - defined
0
pC NA qC ΔE RT
*
KP KP 0 0 e
0
pA pB qA qB
(equilibrium constant from structural data)
Eo* = molar energy separation between zero-
point levels to C‡ and A + B
qXo = standard molar partition functions
Eo* = Eo(C‡) Eo(A) + Eo(B)
activate complex theory
let us look at the partition function of the activated
complex
- partition function for vibration
1
q vibration frequency
1 e
h
kT
* if the force constant is low
(because oscillations correspond to the
complex falling apart)
hn << 1
kT
activate complex theory
= so the exponential may be expanded and the
partition functions becomes,
1 kt
q
h
1 1 .... h
RT
thus,
qC
kT
h
qC
where q = partition function for all other
modes in the complex
activate complex theory
if that is the case then
kT
K xK
‡
h 0
NA pC ΔE RT
*
where K RT 0 0 e
0
pA pB
* a kind of equilibrium constant with one
vibrational mode of C‡ discarded
* rate constant
keff = k‡K‡ = kT K
giving h
kT K
keff = Eyring Equation
h
κ is the transmission coefficient
activate complex theory
Collision of structureless particles
@ consider A and B as two structureless particles
- collide = to give an activated complex
if J = A and B particles = structureless atoms
- the only contributions to the partition functions
are the translational term the of molar partition
function of J; q
q =V
q
m
l
J 3
J
where
h RT
lJ =
q
and Vm =
(kT2p mJ)
1/2 q
p
activate complex theory
activated complex = a diatomic cluster
mass mC‡ = mA + mB
has one vibrational mode
= corresponds to the motion along the reaction
coordinate, therefore does not appear in qc
thus the molar partition function of the activated
complex is given as q
q 2IkT V m
q c± = 2 x 3 ±
lC
activate complex theory
@ for diatomic molecule of bond length r
moment of inertia, I = r2 ( µ = mAmB/(mA + mB))
then, kT RT NA Λ3A ΛB3 2IkT ΔE RT
keff o 3 0 2 e
0
h p ΛC Vm
kT Λ A ΛB 2IkT ΔE RT
keff NA 2 e 0
h ΛC
1/2
8kT 2 ΔE RT
keff NA r e
0
identifying r2 as * or the reactive
Cross-section
activate complex theory
partition functions
= calculated from
spectroscopic information about their
energy levels
approximate expressions
difficulty with the Eyring equation:
= calculation of the partition function of the
activated complex
- make assumptions about its size, shape
and structure
activate complex theory
Thermodynamic Aspects
accepting K as equilibrium constant
express in terms of Gibbs energy of activation
G‡ = RT ln K
since, G = H TS
‡S = entropy of activation, and
‡H = enthalpy of activation
G‡ = ‡H T‡S
activate complex theory
G, H, and S of activation
= used to report experimental reaction rates
encountered when relationship between
equilibrium constants and values of
reaction are explored using correlation analysis
* in which, plot ln against ln k
many cases = correlation is linear:
that is as the reaction becomes
thermodynamically favorable its rate
constant increases
activate complex theory
substituting G‡ = ‡H T‡S into keff equation
is absorbed into the entropy term
‡
Δ S
‡
Δ H kT RT
keff Be R e RT where B x o
h p
- expressing this equation in the Arrhenius form
2 lnk
Ea RT
T V gives
‡H = Ea 2RT for bimolecular gas-phase
reaction
‡H = Ea RT for unimolecular reaction in
either phase
for reaction in solution
activate complex theory
then,
keff can be written in the Arrhenius form
Ea
keff Ae RT
* for a bimolecular gas-phase reaction
A
and Δ S R ln 2
‡
ΔSR
A e e2 ‡
B
activate complex theory
using ACT - thermodynamic version
- makes it simple to look at reactions between
ions (in solution)
A + B = C‡
C‡ Product
* in the thermodynamic approach - rate law
d[P] ‡ ‡
k [ C ] d[P] k2 A B
dt dt
* with thermodynamic equilibrium constant
aC C ‡
K K
‡
K or C A B
‡
aA aB [A][B] Kγ
activate complex theory
then
d[P]
k2 A B
dt
where K Expressing rate constant
k2 k
‡
In terms of thermodynamic
K constants
when a = 1,
o
k = rate constant
2
o
k Kk
2
‡
that is o
k
k2
2
K
activate complex theory
at low concentration a can be expressed in terms of
ionic strength
- using D-H limiting law log j Azj I
2
then, o
log k2 log k2 A z z z A zB I
2
A
2
B
2
log k2 log k2 2AzA zB I
o
kinetic salt effect
A = 0.509 in aqueous solution at 298 K
activate complex theory
* variation of the rate constant with ionic strength
thank you!
jose s. solis, ph.d.
i.s. martinez, ph.d.
institute of chemistry
university of the philippines
diliman, quezon city