For a chemical reaction, the rate law or rate equation is an equation which links the reaction rate with concentrations or pressures of reactants. For a reaction n A + m B → C + D, it is typically of the form
In this equation, * expresses the concentration of a given X, usually in mol/liter and k(T) is known as 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, surface area of the adsorbate or light irradiation.
The exponents n' and m' are called orders and depend on the reaction mechanism. The stoichiometric coefficients and reaction orders are very often equal, but only in one step reactions, molecularity (number of molecules or atoms actually colliding) and reaction order must be the same. If the concentration of one of the reactants remains constant (because it is a catalyst or it is in great excess with respect to the other reactants) its concentration can be included in the rate constant, obtaining a pseudo constant: if B is the reactant whose concentration is constant then . The second order rate equation has been reduced to a pseudo first order rate equation. This makes the treatment to obtain an integrated rate equation much easier.
The rate equation is a differential equation, and it can be integrated in order to obtain an integrated rate equation that links concentrations of reactants or products with time.
Where r is the reaction rate and k is the reaction rate coefficient, k has units of concentration/time. If, and only if, this zero-order reaction 1) occurs in a closed system, 2) there is no net build-up of intermediates and 3) there are no other reactions occurring, it can be shown by solving a Mass balance for the system that:
If this differential equation is integrated it gives an equation which is often called the integrated zero-order rate law
where represents the initial concentration.
A reaction is zero order if concentration data are plotted versus time and the result is a straight line. The slope of this resulting line is the zero order rate constant k.
The half-life of a reaction describes the time needed for half of the reactant to be depleted (same as the half-life involved in nuclear decay, which is a first-order reaction). For a zero-order reaction the half-life is given by
A first-order reaction depends on the concentration of only one reactant (a unimolecular reaction). Other reactants can be present, but each will be zero-order. The rate law for a first-order reaction is
k is the first order rate constant that has units of 1/time
If, and only if, this first-order reaction 1) occurs in a closed system, 2) there is no net build-up of intermediates and 3) there are no other reactions occurring, it can be shown by solving a mass balance for the system that
The integrated first-order rate law is
A plot of time
A second-order reaction or bimolecular reaction depends on the concentrations of one second-order reactant, or two first-order reactants.
For a second order reaction, its reaction rate is given by:
The integrated second-order rate laws are respectively
The half-life equation for a second-order reaction dependent on one second-order reactant is
Another way to present the above rate laws is to take the log of both sides:
where
One way to obtain a pseudo first order reaction is to use a large excess of one of the reactants (say *)." target="_blank" >By collecting k' for many reactions with different (but excess) concentrations of * gives k (the regular second order rate constant) as the slope.
Reactions with order 3 are very rare, to the point that some chemists think they don't exist, and (almost) always involve dinitrogen pentoxide
| Zeroth Order | First Order | Second Order | n-th Order | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rate Law | ||||
| Integrated Rate Law | ||||
| Units of Rate Constant | ||||
| Linear Plot to determine | ||||
| Half-life |
A pair of forward and reverse reactions may define an equilibrium process. For example (s,t,u and v are the stoichiometric coefficients):
where: k1 is the rate coefficient for the reaction which consumes a and b; k2 is the rate coefficient for the backwards reaction, which consumes x and y and produces a and b.
The constants k1 and k2 are related to the equilibrium coefficient for the reaction (K) by the following relationship (set r=0 in balance):
For reactant A:
For reactant B:
For product C:
These differential equations can be solved analytically and the integrated rate equations (supposing that initial concentrations of every substance except A are zero) are
The steady state approximation leads to very similar results in an easier way.
The integrated rate equations are then
One important relationship in this case is
This can be the case when studying a bimolecular reaction and a simultaneous hydrolysis (which can be treated as pseudo order one) takes place: the hydrolysis complicates the study of the reaction kinetics, because some reactant is being "spent" in a parallel reaction. For example A reacts with R to give our product C, but meanwhile the hydrolysis reaction takes away an amount of A to give B, a byproduct:
The integrated rate equation for the main product is
The integrated equations were analytically obtained but during the process it was assumed that
Chemical kinetics | Physical chemistry | Chemical engineering
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It uses material from the
"Rate equation".
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