The molecularity of an elementary step describes the number of
reactive partners in the elementary step. For example, the above
elementary step is called bimolecular because two molecules
collide. Commonly, elementary steps are mono-, bi-, or
termolecular. The probability of four molecules colliding at
exactly the same place and time is so small that we can safely
assume that no reaction will ever be tetramolecular. Because take
up a large amount of space, we will represent elementary steps in
this SparkNote as normal reactions with molecular formula line
equations. You will know from the context (i.e. talking
about the steps of a mechanism) whether the reaction is an
elementary step or an overall reaction.
Another property of mechanisms is that they must predict the experimentally determined rate law. To calculate the rate law from a mechanism you need to first know the rate limiting step. The rate limiting step determines the rate of the reaction because it is the slowest step. You can rationalize that a reaction can only go so fast as its slowest step by thinking about what happens when you encounter an accident on the highway that closes all but one lane. You may have been able to race along at 65 m.p.h. (depending on your state's laws) before you reached the lane closure but the slow passage of cars past the accident limits your rate. You can only go as fast through that one lane as the slowest car in front of you.
In the above , the first reaction is labeled as "slow". This
reaction is the rate determining step because it is the slowest
step. As we have stated, that means that the rate of the overall
reaction is equal to the rate of the rate determining step. The
rate of an elementary step is the rate constant for that step
multiplied by the concentrations of the reactants raised to their
stoichiometric powers. Note that this rule only applies for
elementary steps. The rate of an overall reaction is
NOT the product of the concentrations of the
reactants raised to their stoichiometric powers. The rate law for
the first elementary step in the is rate = k [O3].
Because this step is the rate determining step, the rate law is
also the rate law for the overall reaction. Using similar
techniques we can calculate the rate law predicted by any
mechanism. We then check the predicted rate law against the
experimentally determined rate law to test the validity of the
proposed mechanism.
We can follow the progress of a reaction on its way from
reactants to products by graphing the energy of the species
versus the reaction coordinate. We will be vague in describing
the reaction coordinate because its definition is a mess of other
variables composed to best make sense of the progress of the
reaction. The value of the reaction coordinate is between zero
and one. Understanding the meaning of the reaction coordinate is
not important, just know that small values of reaction coordinate
(0-0.2) mean little reaction has taken place and large values
(0.8-1.0) mean that the reaction is almost over. It is a kind of
scale of the process of reaction.
Note that the reactants are placed on the left and the products
on the right. The choice of the energy levels of the reactants
and products is dictated by their energies, those with higher
energies are higher on the diagram and those with lower energies
are lower on the diagram. The difference is energy between the
reactants and the transition state is called the activation
energy. The activation energy is the height of the energy barrier
of the reaction. The transition state is the point of maximum
energy on the diagram which represents a species possessing both
reactant-like and product-like properties. Because it is so high
in energy, the transition state is very reactive and can never be
isolated due to its extremely short lifetime. The relative energy
of the reactants and products, the Î"E on the diagram, determines
whether the reaction is exothermic or endothermic. A reaction
will be exothermic if the energy of the products is less than the
energy of the reactants. A reaction is endothermic when the
energy of the products is greater than the energy of the
reactants. The is for an exothermic reaction. Below is a reaction
coordinate diagram for an endothermic reaction. If a reaction has
n elementary steps in its mechanism, there will be
n-1 minima between the
products and reactants representing intermediates. There will
also be n maxima representing the n transition
states
One confusing point about reaction coordinate diagrams is how to
determine what the rate determining step is. Even experienced
chemists consistently get this type of problem wrong. The rate
determining step is not the one with the highest activation
energy for the step. The rate determining step is the step whose
transition state has the highest energy.
Activation Energy and the Arrhenius Equation
Intuitively, it makes sense that a reaction with a higher
activation barrier will be slower. Think of how much harder you
must roll a ball up a large hill than a smaller one. Let's
consider chemical reactions more deeply to derive an equation
which describes the relationship between the rate constant of a
reaction and its activation barrier. To simplify our derivation,
we will assume that the reaction has a one-step mechanism. This
elementary step represents a collision as shown in . Therefore,
the frequency of the collisions, f, will be important in
our equation. Notice that only a certain orientation of the
molecules will lead to a reaction. For example, the following
collision will not lead to a reaction. The reagent molecules
simply bounce off of one another:
Therefore, we will need to include an orientation factor (or
steric factor), p, that takes into account the fact that
only a certain fraction of collisions will lead to reaction due
to the orientation of the molecules. Another factor we must
consider is that only a certain fraction of the molecules
colliding will have enough energy to overcome the activation
barrier. The Boltzmann distribution is a thermodynamic equation
that tells us what fraction of the molecules have a certain
amount of energy. As you know, at higher temperatures the average
kinetic energy of the molecules increases. Therefore, at higher
temperatures more molecules have an energy greater than the
activation energy-
Combining the above considerations, we state the following relationship between the rate constant and the activation energy, called the Arrhenius equation:
The variable k is the rate constant, which is dependent on the frequency of the collisions f, orientation factor p, activation energy Ea, and temperature T. From the expression for the Arrhenius equation you should note that a small increase in activation energy leads to a large decrease in rate constant. Furthermore, temperature has a similarly exponential effect on the rate constant. An experimental rule of thumb is that a 10oC increase in temperature leads to a doubling of the rate constant.
One application of the Arrhenius equation that is useful is the determination of the activation energy for a reaction. Taking the natural log of the Arrhenius equation gives a linear equation:
A graph of ln k versus 1 / T should give a straight line whose slope is - Ea / R. By measuring the rate constant at a range of different temperatures, you can construct a graph to determine the activation energy of a reaction.
Catalysis
A catalyst speeds up a reaction without being explicit in the
overall balanced equation. It does this by providing an
alternate mechanism for the reaction that has a lower
activation barrier than does the uncatalyzed pathway
There are two types of catalysts--heterogeneous catalysts and homogeneous catalysts. There is no fundamental difference in how these catalysts work. The difference lies in whether the catalyst is in the same phase (solid, liquid, or gas) as the reagents. A homogeneous catalyst is in the same phase as the reactants while a heterogeneous catalyst is not. An enzyme is a biological homogeneous catalyst.