1. Core Concept
Chemical kinetics studies the speed of reactions. While thermodynamics tells us if a reaction will occur (ΔG < 0), kinetics tells us how fast it happens and how (the mechanism).
2. Rate of Reaction
Rate is the change in concentration of a reactant/product per unit time.
For aA + bB → cC + dD:
3. Factors Influencing Rate of a Reaction
Effect of Concentration (Rate Law)
According to the collision theory, higher concentration means more particles in a given volume, leading to a higher frequency of effective collisions.
- The exact dependence is given by the experimentally determined Rate Law.
- Increasing the concentration of a zero-order reactant does not change the rate.
Effect of Temperature
For most chemical reactions, the rate increases roughly 2 to 3 times for every 10°C rise in temperature.
- Higher temperature means higher kinetic energy.
- A significantly larger fraction of molecules now possesses energy greater than the activation energy (Ea).
Effect of Catalyst & Surface Area
Catalyst: Alters the rate by providing an alternative reaction pathway/mechanism with a lower activation energy. It does not alter ΔG or equilibrium state, but helps achieve equilibrium faster.
Surface Area: For heterogeneous reactions (e.g., solid reactants), finely divided powders react much faster than large lumps because the exposed surface area for collisions is enormously increased.
4. Integrated Rate Equations
| Order | Integrated Equation | Half-life (t1/2) |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | [A] = [A]0 - kt | [A]0 / 2k |
| 1 | ln[A] = ln[A]0 - kt | 0.693 / k |
| 2 | 1/[A] = 1/[A]0 + kt | 1 / (k[A]0) |
5. Temperature Dependence
6. Collision Theory
7. Conceptual Insights
Order vs Molecularity
| Feature | Order of Reaction | Molecularity of Reaction |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | Sum of concentration powers in rate law | Number of reacting species in elementary step |
| Values | Can be 0, fraction, or integer | Always a positive whole number (1, 2, rarely 3) |
| Nature | Determined experimentally | Theoretical concept |
Mechanism & Slowest Step
In complex (multi-step) reactions, molecularity has no meaning for the overall reaction. The overall rate is governed by the Rate Determining Step (RDS), which is the slowest step in the mechanism.
8. Common Mistakes
- Rate Constant (k) Units: They depend heavily on order!
Units of k = (mol/L)1-n s-1. - Arrhenius Exponent Sign: The exponent is negative
(-Ea/RT). Higher Temperature T makes the exponent less negative, causing k to increase exponentially.
9. IAT Exam Focus Points
- Half-life Dependencies: For an nth order reaction,
t1/2 ∝ 1/[A]0n-1. If halving initial concentration doubles t1/2, it's 2nd order. - Pseudo-First Order: E.g., Hydrolysis of esters or inversion of cane sugar in water. Water is in huge excess, so its concentration doesn't change, making it pseudo-1st order.
- Graph Identification:
- Plot
[A] vs tforms straight line → Zero Order. - Plot
ln[A] vs tforms straight line → First Order. - Plot
1/[A] vs tforms straight line → Second Order.
- Plot
10. Practice Mock Test
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Chemical Kinetics