The H
2 + Br
2 Reaction
The overall rate for the reaction was
established in 1906 by Bodenstein and Lind
HBrkBr
BrHk
dt
HBrd
/
2
2
3
22
The Mechanism
The mechanism was proposed independently by
Christiansen and Herzfeld and by Michael Polyani.
Mechanism
Rate Laws
BrBr2
2
HHBrHBr
2
BrHBrBrH
2
BrHHBrH
2
2BrBrBr
211
Brkv
222 HBrkv
HBrkv
222
HBrHkv
33
2
44 Brkv
Using the SSA
Using the SSA on the rates of
formation of Br• and H•
HBr
k
k
Br
BrH
k
k
k
dt
HBrd
/
2
3
2
2
3
22
4
1
2
2
Rate Laws for the Rice-Herzfeld
Mechanism
The rate laws for the elementary
reactions are as follows.
6211 HCkv
36222
CHHCkv
2322 CHCHkv
3322
// CHCHHkv
2333 CHCHHkv
Explosions
Thermal explosions
Rapid increase in the reactions rate with
temperature.
Chain branching explosions
chain branching steps in the mechanism
lead to a rapid (exponential) increase in
the number of chain carriers in the
system.
Photochemical Reactions
Many reactions are initiated by the
absorption of light.
Stark-Einstein Law – one photon is
absorbed by each molecule responsible for
the primary photochemical process.
Iv
I
I = Intensity of the absorbed radiation
Primary Quantum Yield
Define the primary quantum yield,
absorbed photons of #
productsprimary of #
Define the overall quantum yield,
absorbed photons of #
react that molecules reactant of #
Photosensitization
Transfer of excitation energy from one
molecule (the photosensitizer) to
another nonabsorbing species during a
collision..
HHgHHHg
HHgHHg
HgHg
nm
2
2
254
2
Polymerization Kinetics
Chain polymerization
Activated monomer attacks another
monomer, chemically bonds to the
monomer, and then the whole unit
proceeds to attack another monomer.
Stepwise polymerization
A reaction in which a small molecule
(e.g., H
2O) is eliminated in each step.
Chain Polymerization
The overall polymerization rate is first order
in monomer and ½ order in initiator.
The kinetic chain length,
kcl
Measure of the efficiency of the chain
propagation reaction.
produced centres active of #
consumed units monomer of #
i
p
kcl
v
v
Mechanism
Initiation
I 2 R•
Or
M + R• M
1 •
Propagation
M + M
1
• M
2
•
M + M
2• M
3 •
M + M
3
• M
4
•
Etc.
Ikv
ii
Rate Laws
1npp MMkv
Mechanism (Cont’d)
Termination
M + M
3• M
4 •
2
Mkv
tt
Note – Not all the initiator molecules produce chains
Define = fraction of initiator molecules that produce chains
Ik
dt
Md
i
2
Return to Kinetic Chain Length
We can express the kinetic chain
length in terms of k
t
and k
p
2
1
2
1
2
2
2
ti
p
t
p
kcl
kk
IMk
Mk
MMk
Stepwise Polymerization
A classic example of a stepwise
polymerization – nylon production.
NH
2
-(CH
2
)
6
-NH
2
+ HOOC-(CH
2
)
4
COOH
NH
2
-(CH
2
)
6
-NHOC-(CH
2
)
4
COOH + H
2
O
After many steps
H-(NH-(CH
2)
6-NHOC-(CH
2)
4CO)
n-OH
The Reaction Rate Law
Consider the condensation of a
generic hydroxyacid
OH-M-COOH
Expect the following rate law
COOHOHkv
polypoly
The Reaction Rate Law (Cont’d)
Let [A] = [-COOH]
A can be taken as any generic end
group for the polymer undergoing
condensation.
Note 1 –OH for each –COOH
2
Ak
AOHkv
poly
polypoly
The Reaction Rate Law (Cont’d)
If the rate constant is independent of
the molar mass of the polymer
opoly
o
opoly
o
t
Atk
A
COOHtk
COOH
COOH
1
1
The Fraction of Polymerization
Denote p = the fraction of end groups
that have polymerized
o
to
A
AA
p
opoly
opoly
Atk
Atk
p
1
Statistics of Polymerization
Define P
n = total probability that a
polymer is composed of n-monomers
ppP
n
n
1
1
The Degree of Polymerization
Define <n> as the average number of
monomers in the chain
t
o
A
A
p
n
1
1
Degree of Polymerization (cont’d)
The average polymer length in a
stepwise polymerization increases as
time increases.
opoly
opoly
opoly
Atk
Atk
Atk
p
n
1
1
1
1
1
Molar Masses of Polymers
The average molar mass of the
polymer also increases with time.
Two types of molar mass distributions.
<M>
n = the number averaged molar mass
of the polymer.
<M>
w
= the mass averaged molar mass
of the polymer.
Definitions of <M>
n
Two definitions!
J
JJ
o
n
Mn
n
MpM
1
11
M
o = molar mass of monomer
n = number of polymers of mass M
n
M
J
= molar mass of polymer of length n
J
Definitions of <M>
w
<M>
w is defined as follows
J
JJ
JJ
j
x
no
w
Mn
Mn
pxMpM
n
122
1
Note - x
n
the number of monomer
units in a polymer molecule
The Dispersity of a Polymer Mixture
Polymers consists of many molecules
of varying sizes.
Define the dispersity index () of the
mass distribution.
n
w
M
M
Note – monodisperse sample
ideally has <M>
w
=<M>
n
The Dispersity Index in a Stepwise
Polymerization
The dispersity index varies as follows
in a condensation polymerization
n
w
M
M
1
Note – as the polymerization
proceeds, the ratio of <M>
w/<M>
n
approaches 2!!!
Mass Distributions in Polymer
Samples
For a random polymer sample
0911131517192123 252729313335373941
Monodisperse Sample
Polydisperse Sample
Molar mass / (10000 g/mole)
P
n
Types of Catalyst
We will briefly discuss three types of
catalysts. The type of catalyst
depends on the phase of the catalyst
and the reacting species.
Homogeneous
Heterogeneous
Enzyme
Homogeneous Catalysis
The catalyst and the reactants are in the
same phase
e.g. Oxidation of SO
2
(g)
to SO
3
(g)
2 SO
2
(g) + O
2
(g) 2 SO
3
(g)SLOW
Presence of NO (g), the following occurs.
NO (g) + O
2
(g) NO
2
(g)
NO
2 (g) + SO
2 (g) SO
3 (g) + NO (g)FAST
SO
3 (g) is a potent acid rain gas
H
2O (l) + SO
3 (g) H
2SO
4 (aq)
Note the rate of NO
2
(g) oxidizing
SO
2(g) to SO
3(g) is faster than the
direct oxidation.
NO
x(g) are produced from burning
fossil fuels such as gasoline, coal, oil!!
Heterogeneous Catalysis
The catalyst and the reactants are in
different phases
adsorption the binding of molecules on a
surface.
Adsorption on the surface occurs on active
sites
Places where reacting molecules are
adsorbed and physically bond to the metal
surface.
The hydrogenation of ethene (C
2H
4 (g))
to ethane
C
2
H
4
(g) + H
2
(g) C
2
H
6
(g)
Reaction is energetically favourable
rxnH = -136.98 kJ/mole of ethane.
With a finely divided metal such as Ni
(s), Pt (s), or Pd(s), the reaction goes
very quickly .
There are four main steps in the process
the molecules approach the surface;
H
2 (g) and C
2H
4 (g) adsorb on the surface;
H
2
dissociates to form H(g) on the surface; the
adsorbed H atoms migrate to the adsorbed C
2H
4
and react to form the product (C
2H
6) on the
surface
the product desorbs from the surface and
diffuses back to the gas phase
Simplified Model for Enzyme Catalysis
E enzyme; S substrate; P
product
E + S ES
ES P + E
rate = k [ES]
The reaction rate depends directly on
the concentration of the substrate.
Enzyme Catalysis
Enzymes - proteins (M > 10000 g/mol)
High degree of specificity (i.e., they will
react with one substance and one
substance primarily
Living cell > 3000 different enzymes
The Lock and Key Hypothesis
Enzymes are large, usually floppy
molecules. Being proteins, they are
folded into fixed configuration.
According to Fischer, active site is
rigid, the substrate’s molecular
structure exactly fits the “lock” (hence,
the “key”).