Reaction Kinetics 2 Chapter - 3
Reaction Kinetics 2 Chapter - 3
2A + B + C products
Firstly one must decide which reactant (or product) can most easily be
monitored by an available technique. Assume the choice is A. [A] is
then monitored under conditions where [A] << [B] and [C] to
determine whether more than 95% of A was used during the reaction.
If this is not the case, the possibility of reversible reactions should be
considered.
Determine the reaction order with regard to [A]. The value of [A],
ln[A], of [A]-1 will change linearly with time for zero-, first-, or second-
order reactions, respectively. (The concentrations of all the other
reagents are kept constant during the determinations).
Now determine the reaction orders with regard to each of the
reagents. Assume that it could be determined that the reaction is
second order with regard to A. To determine the rate equations, the
second-order rate constant, k, is measured as function of [B] and [C].
Assume the following results are obtained:
A and C constant
A and B constant
At constants [A] and [C]:
kobs1 = k0 + k1[B]
The reaction starts from A, but does not run its course completely.
Thus, equilibrium is reached.
The reaction starts with A and B but does not run its full course and
equilibrium is reached after a certain amount of time. The forward
reaction is a second-order reaction, but the backwards reaction is
first order. The process therefore leads to a mixed reaction-order
behaviour. The problem is overcome by executing the forward
reaction step under pseudo-first-order conditions. The processing
therefore corresponds to that of first-order reactions:
d
[ A] k 2 [ At ][ B0 ] k 2 [ Pt ] (1)
dt
because [A]0 – [A]t = [P]t
k 2 [ At ][ B0 ] k 2 [ A0 ] [ A]t (2)
At equilibrium, that is t = , it is valid that:
K
[ P ]
[ A0 ] [ A ] k 2
[ A ][ B ]0 [ B0 ][ A ] k 2
k 2 [B0 ] k 2
from which: [A 0 ] .[A ]
k 2
Substitution of this equation in the first equation produces:
d k 2 [ B 0 ] k 2
[A] k 2 [A t ][B0 ] k 2 .[A ] [A t ]
dt k 2
k 2 [A t ][B0 ] k 2 [B0 ] k 2 .[A ] k 2 [A]t
k 2 [B0 ] k 2 [A t ] [A ] (3)
Integration of this equation produces:
[A ] [A]
ln k 2 [B0 ] k 2 t k obs t (4)
[A]0 [A]
where kobs = kK[B]/{1 + K[B]} and {[A] + [AB]} are the total amount [AB]
that can react
At low [Bo], {1 + K[Bo]} 1 and therefore kobs = kK[Bo] under these
conditions.
At high [Bo], {1 + K[Bo]} K[Bo] and therefore kobs = k under these
conditions.
Additional notes
3.2.10 The flow-equilibrium approach (stationary state
approximation)
Observe the case where the formation of the intermediate AB is
slow and competes with the rate-determining reaction step:
d k1k 2 [A] k 1k 2
[A] [A t ] [A ] , with
dt k1 k2
k1k 2 [B] k 1k 2
k obs
k1 k2
The deduction of this takes places as follows:
d
[A] k1[A][B] k 1[AB] (1) and
dt
d
[AB] k 1[AB] k1[A][B] k 2 [AB] k 2 [P] 0 , from which
dt
k1[A][B] k 2 [P]
[AB] (2)
k 1 k 2
Substitution of (2) in (1) and the substitution of [Pt] with [Ao] - [At]
produce: