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Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways Solutions for Chapter 11 End-of-Chapter Problems Problem 11.1. Examples of very slow processes are geological changes that, for example, transform sedimentary deposits into metamorphic rock or mineralize bones to form fossils. Reactions that take a year or a few years include those that age wine and, if continued for too long, ruin it. Fast reactions include almost every reaction in living organisms, because many biochemical pathways must be sensitive to environmental changes in order to maintain the organism (homeostasis). Other very fast reactions are those in combustions and explosions. Problem 11.2. (a) In Investigate This 11.1, the red phenolphthalein color faded more rapidly in the solution with higher base concentration, so we would predict that it would fade faster in a 2.0 M sodium hydroxide solution compared to a 1.0 M solution. (b) By the same reasoning as in part (a), we would expect that the color would fade slower in a 0.10 M sodium hydroxide solution compared to a 1.0 M solution. Problem 11.3. The reaction of hydroxide anions with the colorless form of phenolphthalein is an acid-base reaction transferring the protons from the two acidic –OH groups bonded to the six-membered rings (These react like phenol; see Table 6.2.) to hydroxide ions. The dianion rearranges to the more stable red form with more pi-electron delocalization over the entire structure. OH HO C O C + 2OH–(aq) O (aq) O– –O C O C + 2H2O(l) O O C O + 2H2O(l) C O O (aq) (aq) red colorless Problem 11.4. The rate of a chemical reaction refers to the change of concentrations of reactants and products as a function of time. Rate is a change per time. The measurement of any variable that is proportional to a reactant or product concentration as a function of time, can be used to characterize the rate of the reaction. Problem 11.5. (a) In the stroboscopic study of the bombardier beetle shown in the chapter opening illustration, there are about seven frames between the beginning of the first discharge and the beginning of the second. Since the frames are taken every 0.00025 seconds (0.25 ms), the time between discharges is about 0.00175 s [= (7 frames)(0.00025 s·frame–1)]. The rate of discharge is the inverse of time between discharges: rate = (1 discharge) ≈ 570 discharge·s–1. (0.00175 s) (b) The rate of discharge of the beetle would produce disturbances in the air around the beetle at a frequency of 570 s–1, which is in the range of human hearing. Audio recordings of the sound the beetle makes show that the sound is produced at the frequency of the discharge. ACS Chemistry FROG 63 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 Problem 11.6. The reaction that turns the phenolphthalein red is an acid-base reaction (Problem 11.3), transfer of protons from the acid (phenolphthalein) to the base (hydroxide anion). Proton transfers are almost always quite rapid. The reaction that produces the colorless form of phenolphthalein from its red dianion is between a nucleophile (the hydroxide anion) and an electrophilic center at the middle of the dianion. Nucleophile-electrophile reactions are not always fast and this one is slowed by the fact that two negative species have to come together for the reaction to occur. Since like charges repel one another, this slows the reaction. Problem 11.7. (a) When NH3(aq) solution is added to AgCl(s) the NH3 begins to react to form the diammine complex, Ag(NH3)2+(aq): AgCl(s) + 2NH3(aq) ⇔ Ag(NH3)2+(aq) + Cl−(aq) The concentration of NH3(aq), [NH3(aq)], in the solution decreases with time, as more and more AgCl(s) reacts. (b) The amount of solid silver chloride decreases with time, as it reacts with the NH3(aq) to form Ag(NH3)2+(aq). (c) The amount of the diammine complex, Ag(NH3)2+(aq), increases with time as more and more AgCl(s) and NH3(aq) react. Problem 11.8. Molecules move faster at higher temperatures. (Their internal motions (vibrations and rotations) also gain more energy, so vibrations and rotations are more active.) Molecules have to come together to react, so they should come together faster if they are moving faster and reactions should speed up as temperature increases. (As we will find in Section 11.6, this is a relatively minor effect compared to the activation energy effect, but even reactions with zero activation energy go faster at higher temperature because of the faster motion.) Problem 11.9. To test whether a substance, either a reactant or a catalyst, changes the rate of a reaction, you have to have a method to measure the rate of the reaction, for example, change of color with time, rate of evolution of gas with time, or some other observable change that is proportional to the amount of reaction that has occurred. Then you measure the rate of the reaction with varying amounts of the substance being tested, while all other reaction conditions are held constant. If the reaction rate increases as the concentration of the substance tested increases, it is very likely that the substance is acting either to catalyze the reaction or is a reactant that is involved in part of the reaction pathway that determines the rate of the reaction. [As usual, there are exceptions to this generalization. For example, if a catalyst for the reaction is saturated (see Section 11.10 and Problem 11.79), then addition of more reactant will not increase the reaction rate.] Problem 11.10. Consider a solution reaction that bubbles as the solution goes from clear and colorless to clear blue. Since a gas is being produced in this reaction (it bubbles), the volume of gas produced as a function of time could be measured to find the reaction rate. The volume of gas at constant pressure and temperature is proportional to the number of moles of gas produced, so the rate of production of gas volume is proportional to the rate at which gaseous product produced. 64 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways Similarly, the pressure of gas produced at constant volume and temperature is proportional to the number of moles of gas produced, so the rate of increase of pressure at constant volume and temperature could also be used as a measure of rate. The color change in the solution, colorless to blue, must also be associated with whatever change is occurring, so we can follow the change in absorption of light (more red light is absorbed as the process occurs) as a function of time to get a measure of the rate of the process. Problem 11.11. (a) We are asked to sketch a concentration vs. time graph of the concentrations of N2, H2, and NH3, beginning with a mixture of N2 and H2 undergoing this reaction: N2(g) + 3H2(g) → 2NH3(g) According to the problem statement, we start with a stoichiometric mixture of N2 and H2, that is, with a concentration of H2 that is three times the concentration of N2. The changes of concentrations with time are not linear, but, for simplicity, they are drawn as linear in this graph: 30 concentrations 25 20 N2 H2 15 NH3 10 5 0 0 1 2 3 4 time 5 6 7 8 9 10 Things to note are: the rate of change of the H2 concentration is three times the rate of change of the N2 concentration, that is, the slope of the H2 line is three times the slope of the N2 line; the ratio of H2 to N2 is equal to three, throughout the reaction, since three moles of H2 react for every mole of N2 that reacts; and, the concentration of NH3 is equal to twice the concentration of N2 that has reacted throughout the reaction. (b) The expression for the rate of ammonia, NH3, production in terms of gas pressure, PNH3, change is: ∆PNH 3 rate of ammonia production = ∆t (c) The expression for the rate of ammonia production in terms of concentration, [NH3(g)], change is: ∆ [NH 3 ] rate of ammonia production = ∆t (d) We see from the graph in part (a) that the rate of production of NH3 is twice as large as the rate of reaction of N2. If N2 is reacting at a rate of 0.15 M·min–1, then ammonia must be being formed at double this rate or 0.30 M·min–1. ACS Chemistry FROG 65 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 (e) The reasoning is similar to that in part (d). H2 reacts three times faster than N2, so if N2 is reacting at a rate of 0.15 M·min–1, then hydrogen must be be disappearing at triple this rate or 0.45 M·min–1. (f) Since the datum for the rate of N2 disappearance is given in terms of molarity, the rate of reaction we are interested in is the one written in part (c). From part (d), we know the rate of change of ammonia concentration, so the rate of reaction (ammonia production) is 0.30 M·min-1. Problem 11.12. (a) Data for a reaction that can be symbolized as: A → 2B are: [A], mol·L–1 1.000 0.833 0.714 0.625 0.555 time, s 0.0 10.0 20.0 30.0 40.0 This figure is a plot of these data, with approximate tangents to the curve shown at 10.0, 20.0, and 30.0 seconds. (The tangent lines are displaced a bit from the curve to make them easier to distinguish from one another and the curve.) 1.00 0.95 0.90 [A], M 0.85 0.80 0.75 0.70 0.65 0.60 0.55 0.50 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 time, s The tangent slopes are: (0.75 M – 0.88 M) –1 at 10.0 s: (15.0 s – 5.0 s) = – 0.013 M·s at 20.0 s: at 30.0 s: (0.65 M – 0.75 M) –1 (25.0 s – 15.0 s) = – 0.010 M·s (0.575 M – 0.65 M) –1 (35.0 s – 25.0 s) = – 0.0075 M·s (b) The rate [slopes of the tangents in part (a)] decreases over time, that is, the change in concentration of the reactant as a function of time becomes less. If the rate depends on the amount of A left to react, then it makes sense that the reaction should become slower as [A] decreases. 66 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways (c) The average rates during 10 second intervals are: 0.0 to 10.0 s: (0.833 M – 1.000 M) (10.0 s – 0.0 s) = – 0.0167 M·s–1 10.0 to 20.0 s: (0.714 M – 0.833 M) (20.0 s – 10.0 s) = – 0.0119 M·s–1 20.0 to 30.0 s: (0.625 M – 0.714 M) (30.0 s – 20.0 s) = – 0.0089 M·s–1 30.0 to 40.0 s: (0.555 M – 0.625 M) (40.0 s – 30.0 s) = – 0.0070 M·s–1 (d) The average rates in part (c) follow the same pattern as the instantaneous rates in part (a) and are intermediate in numeric value for the intervals from 10.0 to 20.0 and 20.0 to 30.0 seconds, as we would expect. The earlier and later average rate values are faster and slower, respectively, than the earliest and latest instantaneous rates since the average rates are for earlier and later parts of the reaction. Problem 11.13. [NOTE: These are “cooked” data assuming a reaction that is second order in [H+]. “Data” in end-of-chapter problems in at least two texts suggest this second order. The data are so good that they are also probably fake. These data are probably derived from an assumed mechanism that involves an equilibrium between methanol and hydronium ion to give protonated methanol which then reacts in a slow second order reaction with chloride ion to displace water. Since the hydronium and chloride ion concentrations are assumed to be the same (solution is moderately strong HCl), the rate law that is first order in methanol, hydronium, and chloride reduces to one that is second order in hydronium when the system is flooded with methanol.] (a) Data for the reaction, CH3OH + H+ + Cl– → CH3Cl + H2O, in a solution of methanol and hydrochloric acid are: time, min 0 90 200 360 720 [H+], M 2.12 1.95 1.74 1.54 1.19 The data for the decrease in concentration of the hydronium ion are plotted as the square blue symbols on this graph: ACS Chemistry FROG 67 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 2.5 [H+], M concentrations, M 2.0 [CH3Cl], M 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 0 200 400 600 800 time, min The average rates of hydronium ion disappearance during each time interval are: –1 (1.95 M – 2.12 M) 0 to 90 min: (90 min – 0 min) = – 0.0019 M·min 90 to 200 min: (1.74 M – 1.95 M) –1 (200 min – 90 min) = – 0.0019 M·min 200 to 360 min: (1.54 M – 1.74 M) (360 min – 200 min) = – 0.0013 M·min–1 360 to 720 min: (1.19 M – 1.54 M) (7200 min – 360 min) = – 0.00097 M·min–1 (b) The graph and the average rates calculated in part (a) both show that the rate of the reaction decreases with time, that is, the reaction gets slower as the hydronium ion (and chloride anion) are used up. (c) To get the concentration of chloromethane, [CH3Cl(solvent)], formed in the solution, we assume that the reaction stoichiometry is CH3OH + H+ + Cl– → CH3Cl + H2O, so that one mole of CH3Cl is formed for every mole of H+ that reacts. The difference between the molarity of H+ at any time and its molarity at zero time is the amount that has reacted, which is the amount of CH3Cl formed. These differences are plotted as red circles on the graph in part (a). Problem 11.14. (a) For each reaction, we express the rate of reaction in terms of pressure changes, using the rates as defined by equations (11.7) and (11.8). ∆PNO 3 ∆P 1 ∆PNO 2 (i) 2NO2(g) → NO(g) + NO3(g) rate = –⎛⎝ ⎞⎠ = NO = ∆t ∆t 2 ∆t ∆PBr2 1 ∆P 1 ∆P (ii) 2NOBr(g) → 2NO(g) + Br2(g) rate = –⎛⎝ ⎞⎠ NOBr = ⎛⎝ ⎞⎠ NO = ∆t ∆t 2 2 ∆t (iii) 2N2O5(g) → 4NO2(g) + O2(g) ∆PO 2 1 ∆PN 2 O 5 1 ∆PNO 2 rate = –⎛⎝ ⎞⎠ = ⎛⎝ ⎞⎠ = ∆t ∆t 2 4 ∆t (b) In reaction (i), the reactant disappears twice as fast as either product forms, since two reactant molecules disappear to form one molecule of each product. This difference is accounted for to get the reaction rate in part (a) by multiplying the rate of disappearance of 68 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways reactant by one half. In reaction (ii), two reactant molecules disappear to form two molecules of one product and one molecule of the other. The reactant disappears at the same rate as one product, NO, is formed, but twice as fast as the other, Br2, is formed. These differences are accounted for to get the reaction rate in part (a) by multiplying the rate of disappearance of the reactant and the rate of appearance of NO by one half. In reaction (iii), two reactant molecules disappear to form four molecules of one product, NO2, and one molecule of the other product, O2. Thus, the reactant disappears at half the rate one product, NO2, is formed and at twice the rate the other product, O2, is formed. These differences are accounted for to get the reaction rate in part (a) by multiplying the rate of disappearance of reactant by one half and the rate of formation of NO2 by one fourth. Problem 11.15. (a) 2-chloro-2-methylpropane, (CH3)3CCl, reacts in a solution of water and acetone to give 2-methyl-2-propanol, (CH3)3COH. When a small amount of hydroxide ion, OH–, is present in the solution, the overall initial reaction is: (CH3)3CCl + OH– → (CH3)3COH + Cl–. For different initial concentrations of hydroxide ion, [OH–]0, with all other conditions the same, the times required for the hydroxide to react completely (monitored by change in color of an acid-base indicator) were: expt # 1 2 3 [OH–]0, M 0.0025 0.0030 0.0015 time to color change, s 35 43 22 The rate of disappearance of the hydroxide ion in each experiment is the change in concentration of hydroxide ion (assumed to be completely reacted when the color change occurs) divided by the time required for it to react: rate(1) = (0 M – 0.0025 M) = –7.1 × 10–5 M·s–1 (35 s) rate(2) = (0 M – 0.0030 M) rate(3) = (0 M – 0.0015 M) (43 s) (22 s) = –7.0 × 10–5 M·s–1 = –6.8 × 10–5 M·s–1 The rate of disappearance of the hydroxide ion is the same in each experiment, –7.0 × 10–5 M·s-1 (average). (b) From the stoichiometry of the reaction, we see that one mole of 2-chloro-2-methylpropane, (CH3)3CCl, reacts for every mole of hydroxide ion that reacts. Therefore, the rate of disappearance of (CH3)3CCl is the same as the rate of disappearance of hydroxide ion, which is –7.0 × 10–5 M·s–1 in these experiments. Since the rate of the reaction is the same for all the concentrations of hydroxide ion investigated, we can conclude that the reaction rate does not depend on the concentration of hydroxide ion in the solution. Problem 11.16. (a) The rate of formation of oxygen from ozone, 2O3(g) → 3O2(g), is 1.8 × 10–3 M·s–1 at a certain temperature. The rate of the reaction can be written as: ACS Chemistry FROG 69 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 1 ∆[O3 ] ⎛ 1⎞ ∆[O2 ] rate = –⎛⎝ ⎞⎠ =⎝ ⎠ 2 ∆t 3 ∆t Therefore, we can write the rate of ozone disappearance as: ∆[O3 ] 2 ∆[O2 ] = –⎛⎝ ⎞⎠ = – (2/3)(1.8 × 10–3 M·s–1) = – 1.2 × 10–3 M·s–1 ∆t 3 ∆t (b) As we see in part (a), we can get the rate of the reaction from either the rate of disappearance of ozone or the rate of appearance of oxygen: rate = (1/3)(1.8 × 10–3 M·s–1) = 6 × 10–4 M·s–1 Show that the same result is obtained from the rate of disappearance of ozone. Problem 11.17. (a) The coupled reactions in the iodide-persulfate-thiosulfate system animated in the Web Companion, Chapter 11, Section 11.2, page 6, can be represented like this: oxidized reduced S2O82– 2I– S4O62– 2SO42– I2 2S2O32– oxidized reduced reduced oxidized (This representation is patterned after Figure 10.12, that shows the coupling of reactions responsible for the observations on the Blue-Bottle reaction, Investigate This 10.61, Chapter 10, Section 10.8, which remains blue for a time and then suddenly changes to colorless. In the Companion reaction, the solution remains clear and colorless until all the thiosulfate has reacted and then suddenly changes color to a deep blue, if starch indicator is present.) The reaction on the left here is the reaction at the top of the Companion page and the reaction on the right is the reaction in the middle of the page. (b) The coupling species in the iodide-persulfate-thiosulfate system are the iodide and iodine that cycle between the reduced iodide form and the oxidized iodine. The reduction of persulfate dianion to sulfate is coupled to the oxidation of thiosulfate dianion. (c) The solution remains clear and colorless until the thiosulfate has all reacted, which means that no appreciable amount of iodine is present in the solution until the thiosulfate has all reacted. Thus, in order to prevent the build-up of iodine (and, hence, color) in the solution, the reduction of iodine to iodide by thiosulfate must be fast compared to the oxidation of iodide to iodine by persulfate. (d) Since iodide is being rapidly regenerated throughout the colorless phase of the reaction, its concentration does not change and remains equal to its initial concentration. (e) The ∆[I2] shown in the Web Companion plot of [I2] as a function of t, is the change in concentration of iodine that would have occurred in the time period ∆t, if the reaction mixture didn’t contain thiosulfate. The amount of iodine that would have formed is equal to one half the number of moles of thiosulfate added to the solution. (f) The Web Companion plot is a little misleading, because it shows the ∆ [I2] as though it had actually occurred during the measured time, ∆t. This may be the best one can do to represent a coupled reaction system like this one. Difficulties with representation, do not translate to 70 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways difficulties interpreting the data, which you have an opportunity to do in Check This 11.22 and Problem 11.26. Problem 11.18. (a) The reaction, 2CO(g) → CO2(g) + C(s), was studied by adding CO(g) to a hot reaction vessel and following the decrease in total pressure, Ptotal, of the gases in the constant volume reactor: time, s Ptotal, kPa 0 400 1000 1800 33.2 31.6 29.8 27.9 For every two moles of gaseous CO that react, one mole of gaseous CO2 is formed. Therefore, if n2 moles of CO2 have been formed, 2n2 moles of CO have reacted. If the initial number of moles of CO in the reactor is n0 and the number of moles of CO left at a later time is n1 (= n0 - 2n2), then the total number of moles of gas, nt, at the later time is: nt = n1 + n2 = (n0 – 2n2) + n2 = n0 – n2 Thus: n2 = n0 – nt n1 = n0 – 2n2 = n0 – 2(n0 – nt) = 2nt – n0 Since the total pressure in the reactor is directly proportional to the number of moles of gas in the reactor, we can rewrite these two equations in terms of the measured total pressures to give the pressures of each gas in the reactor: PCO2 = (Ptotal)0 – (Ptotal)t PCO = 2(Ptotal)t – (Ptotal)0 Using the second equation, we get PCO at 0, 400, 1000, and 1800 s as 33.2, 30.0, 26.4, and 22.6 kPa, respectively. Thus, the average rates of CO disappearance are: rate (0 to 400 s) = (30.0 kPa – 33.2 kPa) (400 s – 0 s) = 8.0 × 10–3 kPa·s–1 rate (400 to 1000 s) = (26.4 kPa – 30.0 kPa) (1000 s – 400 s) = 6.0 × 10–3 kPa·s–1 rate (1000 to 1800 s) = (22.6 kPa – 26.4 kPa) (1800 s – 1000 s) = 4.8 × 10–3 kPa·s–1 (b) We could use a procedure similar to that we used in part (a) to get the average rates of formation of CO2 in this system, but it is much easier to use the relationship between the rate of disappearance of CO and rate of formation of CO2. From the stoichiometry, the rate of formation of CO2 is one half the rate of disappearance of CO. Thus, in the three time intervals, the rates of formation of CO2 are 4.0 × 10–3 kPa·s–1, 3.0 × 10–3 kPa·s–1, and 2.4 × 10–3 kPa·s–1, respectively.Problem 11.19. Show how the rate of reaction will change if the concentrations of A and B are both halved in a reaction that is second order in the concentration of reactant A and first order in the concentration of reactant B. The rate law for this reaction is: ACS Chemistry FROG 71 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 rate = k[A]2[B] When [A] = ao and [B] = bo, we have: rateo = kao2bo If [A] = ao/2 and [B] = bo/2, then: 2 2 rate1/2 = k(ao/2)2(bo/2) = k(ao /4)(bo/2) = kao bo/8 = rateo/8 The overall rate of reaction with both reactants halved in concentration is one-eighth the original rate. Problem 11.20. (a) For the reaction, CH3Br(aq) + OH–(aq) → CH3OH(aq) + Br–(aq), the initial rate of reaction decreased by a factor of two when the concentration of hydroxide ion, [OH–(aq)], was halved and increased by a factor of 1.4 when the concentration of bromomethane, [CH3Br(aq)], was increased by a factor of 1.4. The reaction rate goes down by a factor of two when the hydroxide ion concentration, [OH–(aq)], is decreased by a factor of two, so we can conclude that the reaction is first order with respect to [OH–(aq)]. (b) The reaction rate goes up by a factor of 1.4 when the bromomethane concentration, [CH3Br(aq)] is increased by a factor of 1.4, so we can conclude that the reaction is first order with respect to [CH3Br(aq)]. (c) The overall order of the reaction (with respect to the concentrations we have investigated) is two and the rate law is: rate = k[CH3Br(aq)][OH–(aq)] Problem 11.21. (a) For the gas-phase reaction, 2NO(g) + Cl2(g) → 2NOCl(g), the initial rate of disappearance of NO(g) is eight times faster when the concentrations of both reactants are doubled and twice as fast when the concentration of chlorine alone is doubled. The rate of the reaction doubles when the chlorine concentration, [Cl2(g)], doubles, so the reaction must be first order with respect to [Cl2(g)]. (b) The rate of the reaction increases by a factor of eight when both the chlorine concentration, [Cl2(g)], and the nitric oxide concentration, [NO(g)], are doubled. From part (a), we know that the effect of the [Cl2(g)] is to double the reaction rate, so the effect of [NO(g)] doubling is to increase the rate further by a factor of four. Since doubling [NO(g)] results in a quadrupling of the reaction rate, the reaction must be second order with respect to [NO(g)]. (c) The overall order of this reaction (with respect to the concentrations we have investigated) is three, that is, it is third order overall, and the rate law is: rate = k[NO(g)]2[Cl2(g)] Problem 11.22. (a) The rate of a reaction is proportional to the concentration of a reactant and the concentration of a catalyst. The measured initial rates of reaction at a constant catalyst concentration give a rate constant, 8.9 × 10–5 s–1, for the first order disappearance of the reactant. The overall secondorder rate law for this reaction and the first-order rate law with the catalyst concentration, [catalyst], constant, are: 72 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways rate = k[catalyst][reactant] = k′[reactant] The rate constant, k′, is 8.9 × 10–5 s–1. If [catalyst] = 5.0 × 10–3 M, we can calculate k as: ( ) ( 8.9 × 10 –5 s k ′ k = [catalyst] = = 1.8 × 10–3 M–1·s–1 –3 5.0 × 10 M ) Note that the units of k are correct for a second order rate constant. (b) If [reactant] = 0.12 M and [catalyst] = 3.5 × 10–3 M, the initial rate of reaction is: rate = (1.8 × 10–3 M–1·s–1)(0.12 M)(3.5 × 10–3 M) = 7.5 × 10–6 M·s–1 Problem 11.23. The initial rate of a reaction that is first order in each of two reactants is 7.65 × 10–4 M·s–1, when the initial concentration of each reactant is 0.050 M. Write the rate law for this reaction, substitute the data given, and solve to get the rate constant for the reaction: rate = 7.65 × 10–4 M·s–1 = k[reactant 1][reactant 2] = k(0.50 M)(0.50 M) k= 7.65 × 10 –4 M ⋅ s –1 = 3.1 × 10–3 M–1·s–1 (0.50 M)(0.50 M) Problem 11.24. The reaction, 2NO(g) + O2(g) → 2NO2(g), was studied by following the initial rate of disappearance of nitric oxide, – ∆NO(g) ∆t , for different initial reactant concentrations. 0 ( expt # [NO(g)]0, M 1 2 3 0.0125 0.0250 0.0125 ) ( ) – ∆NO(g) ∆t , M·s–1 0 [O2(g]0, M 0.0183 0.0183 0.0370 0.0202 0.0803 0.0409 (a) The rate of disappearance of NO(g) quadruples when the [NO(g)]0 is doubled (with [O2(g)]0 held constant – runs 1 and 2), so the reaction is second order with respect to [NO(g)]. (b) The rate of disappearance of NO(g) doubles when the [O2(g)]0 is doubled (with [NO(g)]0 held constant – runs 1 and 3), so the reaction is first order with respect to [O2(g)]. ( ) ( ) ⎡ ⎤ (c) From the stoichiometry, the reaction rate = 1 2 ⎢ – ∆NO(g) ∆t ⎥ , so the reaction rate for ⎣ 0⎦ each experiment is one-half the value in the last column of the table. (d) The rate law is: rate = k[NO(g)]2[O2(g)] To get k, we substitute the concentrations for any of the experiments into this rate law (with the rate from part (c)) and solve for k. From experiment #1 we have: 0.0101 M ⋅s –1 = 3.53 × 103 M–2·s–1 k= 2 (0.0125 M) (0.0183 M) ACS Chemistry FROG 73 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 The units of k, have to be such that, when multiplied by the units of the concentrations (raised to their appropriate powers), the right hand side of the rate law comes out to have units of M·s–1, the units of the rate. The units of the product of the concentrations in this rate law are M3, so the rate constant has the appropriate units to cancel M2 and leave M·s–1. (e) If the reaction were carried out with [NO(g)]0 = [O2(g]0 = 0.0200 M; rate = (3.53 × 103 M–2·s–1)(0.0200 M)2(0.0200 M) = 0.0282 M·s–1 The rate of disappearance of nitric oxide under these conditions is 0.0564 M·s–1, since it is twice the reaction rate [see part (c)]. Problem 11.25. (a) Data for the reaction, (CH3)3CCl + OH– → (CH3)3COH + Cl–, see Problem 11.15, with the initial concentration of hydroxide ion, [OH–]0 = 0.0025 M, are: expt # [(CH3)3CCl]0, M time to color change, s 1 4 0.015 0.030 35 18 We get the rate of disappearance of hydroxide ion just as we did in Problem 11.15: = –7.1 × 10–5 M·s–1 rate(1) = (0 M – 0.0025 M) (35 s) rate(4) = (0 M – 0.0025 M) (18 s) = –14 × 10–5 M·s–1 (b) The stoichiometry of the reaction shows that the rate of disappearance of (CH3)3CCl in each experiment is the same as the rate of disappearance of the hydroxide ion calculated in part (a) for that experiment. When the concentration of (CH3)3CCl was doubled (experiment 4 compared to 1), the rate of reaction doubled, so the reaction is first order with respect to [(CH3)3CCl]. (c) In Problem 11.15, we found that the rate of the reaction is independent of the concentration of hydroxide ion, that is, the reaction is zero order with respect to [OH–]. In part (b) here, we find that the reaction is first order with respect to [(CH3)3CCl] so the rate law is: rate = – rate of disappearance of (CH3)3CCl = k[(CH3)3CCl] (d) We can determine the numeric value of the rate constant from either experiment 1 or 4 by substituting the appropriate value for [(CH3)3CCl] and the rate into the rate law and solving for k: ( ) 14 × 10 –5 M ⋅ s –1 –3 –1 k = rate [(CH ) CCl] = (0.030 M ) = 4.7 × 10 s 3 3 Problem 11.26. (a) In Check This 11.22, the rate law you found for the reaction in the iodide-persulfatethiosulfate system, S2O82–(aq) + 2I–(aq) → I2(aq) + 2SO42–(aq), from the Web Companion, Chapter 11, Section 11.3, pages 3-6, is: rate = k[S2O82–(aq)][I–(aq)] 74 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways Data are given in the Companion for the concentrations of these reactants, so, to calculate the rate constant, we need the rate of the reaction. Unfortunately, all we have are relative rates of reaction because the results given are the times required for the same unknown ∆[I2(aq)]. Thus, we cannot determine the value of k, from these data. (b) With the added datum, the concentration of thiosulfate anion, [S2O32–(aq)] = 0.0015 M, in each experiment, we can calculate ∆[I2(aq)] and thence the rate of reaction in each case. From the stoichiometry of the thiosulfate anion-iodine reaction, Web Companion, Chapter 11, Section 11.2, page 6, we see that two S2O32– react for every one I2 that reacts. Thus, ∆[I2(aq)] = 0.00075 M in each experiment. Any one of the experiments will can give us the value for k: ∆[I2 (aq)] (0.00075 M) ∆t (21 s) rate = = k= – – 2– 2– (0.077 M)(0.077 M) [S2 O 8 (aq)][I (aq)] [S2 O 8 (aq)][I (aq)] ( ) ( ) k = 6.0 × 10–3 M–1·s–1 Here, we used the data from experiment 1. Check to see that another gives the same result. Problem 11.27. (a) The reaction, MnO4–(aq) + Cr3+(aq) → Mn4+(aq) + CrO42–(aq), is a redox reaction since oxidation numbers change, Cr(III) to Cr(VI) and Mn(VII) to Mn(IV). (b) The rate of this reaction was studied by measuring the time required for the concentration of CrO42–(aq) to increase from zero to 0.020 M. expt # 1 2 3 relative [MnO4–(aq)]0 relative [Cr3+(aq)]0 1 2 1 1 1 0.5 time to [CrO42–(aq)] = 0.020 M 23 min 11 min 45 min The rate of the reaction is inversely proportional to time required to produce 0.020 M CrO42– (aq) — the longer it takes for a reaction to get to a certain point, the slower the reaction. (c) The reaction is first order in both reactants. Comparing experiments 1 and 2, we see that when permanganate is doubled, keeping [Cr3+(aq)]0 constant, the time is cut in half, which means the rate is doubled. If the rate doubles when the concentration is doubled, the reaction is first order in that component. Comparing experiments 3 and 1, we see that when [Cr3+(aq)]0 is doubled, keeping [MnO4–(aq)]0 constant, the time is cut approximately in half, which means the rate also doubles. (d) The rate law for the reaction is: rate = k[MnO4–(aq)][Cr3+(aq)] (e) Compared to reaction 1, if both reactant concentrations are cut in half, the rate will be approximately one fourth the rate in reaction 1. This will mean that it would take approximately 4 times as long to reach the 0.2 M product—that is, approximately 92 min. Problem 11.28. (a) The reaction, 2NH3(g) → N2(g) + 3H2(g), occurs on a hot tungsten filament and can be followed by measuring the pressure increase: ACS Chemistry FROG 75 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 time, s 0 100 200 400 600 800 1000 ∆P, kPa 0 1.46 2.94 5.85 8.81 11.68 14.61 A plot of these data gives a straight line, as shown on this graph. 16 14 12 ∆P, kPa 10 8 6 4 2 0 0 200 400 600 800 1000 time, s The stoichiometry of the reaction shows that every mole of ammonia that reacts produces two moles of gaseous products. If the ammonia reacts so that the pressure of ammonia, PNH3, decreases by 1 kPa, the pressure in the reaction system will increase by 1 kPa. Thus, we can write the reaction rate as: ∆P ∆P rate = – NH3 = total ∆t ∆t The straight line plot shows that the rate of reaction, ∆Ptotal/∆t, remains constant as the ammonia reacts, that is, the reaction rate does not depend on the ammonia pressure (concentration). The reaction is zero order with respect to the ammonia pressure (concentration). (b) The slope of the line on the graph is 1.46 × 10–2 kPa·s–1, which is the rate of the reaction. Since the reaction is zeroth order in ammonia, the pressure of ammonia has no affect on the rate, so the initial reaction rate at any initial pressure of ammonia is the same, 1.46 × 10–2 kPa·s– 1 . The rate is equal to a constant, the rate constant, which is also equal to 1.46 × 10–2 kPa·s–1. Problem 11.29. (a) The decomposition of hydrogen peroxide, 2H2O2(aq) → 2H2O(l) + O2(g), was studied by determining the concentration of reactant left after 30 minutes of reaction, [H2O2(aq)]30. expt # H2O2(aq)]0, M [H2O2(aq)]30, M 1 2 0.874 0.356 0.812 0.331 3 0.589 0.549 To find the average rate of disappearance of hydrogen peroxide we divide the difference between the final and initial concentrations by the time of reaction (30 minutes in each case): disappearance rate1 = (0.812 M – 0.874 M) (30 min) = – 0.0021 M·min–1 76 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways disappearance rate2 = (0.331 M – 0.356 M) (30 min) = – 0.00083 M·min–1 disappearance rate3 = (0.549 M – 0.589 M) (30 min) = – 0.0013 M·min–1 (b) The average rate of disappearance of hydrogen peroxide increases as the initial concentration of hydrogen peroxide increases. Since less than 10% of the hydrogen peroxide reacts in each case, we can take these rates of disappearance as an approximation to the initial rate of disappearance in each case. Plot the average rates as a function of the initial concentration for the first 30 minutes for each experiment to see whether the rate is directly proportional to concentration. average reaction rate, m/min 0.0000 -0.0005 -0.0010 -0.0015 -0.0020 -0.0025 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 average [H2O2], M We see that the points lie pretty well on a straight line, so we can conclude that the reaction is probably first order with respect to [H2O2(aq)]. (c) From the result in part (b), we can write the rate law for the reaction as: rate = k[H2O2(aq)] The stoichiometry of the reaction, shows that two molecules of H2O2 disappear for every mole of O2 that is formed. We write the rate of the reaction as: ⎛ 1 ⎞ ∆[H 2O 2 (aq )] rate = – ⎜ ⎟ ⎝ 2⎠ ∆t Thus, using the results from part (a), the average rates of reaction in the three experiments are: rate1 = 0.0011 M·min–1 rate2 = 0.0004 M·min–1 rate3 = 0.0007 M·min–1 The rate constant for the reaction can be estimated from any of the experiments by dividing the average rate by the initial [H2O2(aq)]: k = (0.0011 M·min–1)/(0.874 M) = 0.0013 min–1 (d) Starting with 0.234 M hydrogen peroxide, predict the concentration of unreacted peroxide after 30 minutes of reaction. Under this condition we have: rate = k[H2O2(aq)] = (0.0013 min–1)(0.234 M) = 0.00030 M·min–1 ACS Chemistry FROG 77 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 The rate of disappearance of hydrogen peroxide is twice as great and has a negative value, - 0.00060 M·min–1, so we get the amount of hydrogen peroxide reacted as: ∆[H2O2(aq)] = (– 0.00060 M·min–1)(30 min) = – 0.018 M The amount of hydrogen peroxide remaining is 0.216 M (= 0.234 M – 0.018 M). Problem 11.30. (a) In aqueous acidic solution, hydrogen peroxide oxidizes iodide ions to elemental iodine and is, itself, reduced to water. The balanced equation for this redox reaction is: H2O2(aq) + 2I–(aq) +2H+(aq) → 2H2O(aq) + I2(aq) (b) In separate experiments, with all other conditions the same, doubling the initial hydrogen peroxide concentration or doubling the iodide ion concentration caused the initial rate of formation of iodine to double. The rate of formation of iodine was four times higher at pH 1.4 compared to pH 2.0, with all other conditions the same. Since the rate of the reaction doubles when either [H2O2(aq)] or [I–(aq)] is doubled, the reaction is first order with respect to both [H2O2(aq)] and [I–(aq)]. At pH 1.4, [H+(aq)] = 10-1.4 M = 0.04 M and at pH 2.0, [H+(aq)] = 10– 2.0 M = 0.01 M. An increase of [H+(aq)] by a factor of four from pH 2.0 to 1.4, increases the rate by a factor of four, so the reaction is also first order with respect to [H+(aq)]. The rate law is: rate = k[H2O2(aq)][I–(aq)][H+(aq)] (c) The relationships of the rate and concentration changes with time are: ⎛ 1 ⎞ ∆[I– (aq )] ∆[I2 (aq )] ∆[H 2 O 2 (aq )] rate = = – = –⎜ ⎟ ⎝2⎠ ∆t ∆t ∆t If the rate of formation of iodine is 2.5 × 10–3 M·s–1, the rate of disappearance of hydrogen peroxide is –2.5 × 10–3 M·s–1, and the rate of disappearance of iodide is –5.0 × 10–3 M·s–1. (d) Changing the concentration of a reactant in the rate law has no affect on the reaction rate constant. The rate constant is a temperature-dependent proportionality factor between the rate and the concentrations and independent of the concentrations. (e) The rate constant is unaffected by dilution (which changes the reactant concentrations), as explained in part (d). Since the dilution halves the concentrations of all three reactants, the rate of reaction will be decreased by a factor of (1/2)3, or one-eighth. The reaction rate will decrease by a factor of eight. Problem 11.31. (a) The decomposition reaction for azomethane is: CH3NNCH3(g) → CH3CH3(g) + N2(g). If the initial pressure of azomethane in a reaction vessel is 10.0 kPa, the azomethane pressure will be reduced by 2.5 kPa to 7.5 kPa after one-quarter of it has decomposed. Since one mole of ethane and one mole of nitrogen are formed for every one mole of azomethane that decomposes, when azomethane pressure decreases by 2.5 kPa, ethane pressure and nitrogen will each increase by 2.5 kPa. The net change in pressure is + 2.5 kPa, (= –2.5 kPa from the azomethane + 2.5 kPa from the ethane + 2.5 kPa from the nitrogen), so that the final total pressure = 12.5 kPa. (b) As we saw in part (a), when the azomethane pressure decreases by x, the total pressure in the flask increases by x. Thus, if, beginning with azomethane at 20 kPa (and 300 °C), the total pressure increases by 1.0 kPa, the azomethane pressure must have decreased from 20 to 19 kPa, 78 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways while both ethane and nitrogen pressures increased from 0 to 1 kPa. Therefore, 1/20 of the original azomethane has decomposed and the rate of decomposition is: (–1 kPa) ∆P = 8.3 × 10-3 kPa-s-1 rate = – azomethane = – 120 s ∆t (c) In another experiment at 300 °C, the initial pressure of azomethane was 5.00 kPa and the total pressure in the vessel reached 5.25 kPa after 2.00 minutes. The initial pressure of azomethane here in part (c) (5.00 kPa) is one fourth the initial pressure in part (b) (20.0 kPa). The average initial rate in part (c) = – (–0.25 kPa) , which is one-fourth the average initial (120 s) rate in part (b). Since the rate is reduced by one fourth when the initial pressure of azomethane is reduced by one fourth, we conclude that the reaction is first order with respect to azomethane. rate = kPazomethane k= rate Pazomethane initial rate 8.3 ×10 –3 kPa ⋅ s –1 = = = 4.2 × 10-4 s-1 initial Pazomethane 20 kPa Problem 11.32. We wish to show that “the sum of the series of reactions (11.25), (11.26), and (11.27) is the stoichiometric reaction (11.16).” An easy approach to this sort of problem is to sum all the reactants on the left and all the products on the right of the series of equations and then cross out the ones that appear on both sides to give the sum or net reaction produced by the series of reactions. In this case, we get: OCl–(aq) + H2O(l) + HOCl(aq) + I–(aq) HOI(aq) + OH–(aq) → HOCl(aq) + OH–(aq) + HOI(aq) + Cl–(aq) + OI–(aq) + H2O(l) The resulting net reaction is stoichiometric reaction (11.16): OCl–(aq) + I–(aq) → Cl–(aq) + OI–(aq) Problem 11.33. Possible pathways for the reaction of nitrogen dioxide with carbon monoxide are: (i) NO2(g) + CO(g) → NO(g) + CO2(g) k(i) (ii) NO2(g) + NO2(g) ⇔ NO(g) + NO3(g) fast equilibrium, K(ii) NO3(g) + CO(g) → NO2(g) + CO2(g) slow, k(ii) (iii) NO2(g) + NO2(g) → NO(g) + NO3(g) slow, k(iii) NO3(g) + CO(g) → NO2(g) + CO2(g) fast (a) The net reaction is the same for each pathway as it must be, if the pathway is to be a possible one. For pathway (i), the reaction written is the net reaction: net reaction (i): NO2(g) + CO(g) → NO(g) + CO2(g) For pathway (ii), we sum the reactants and products in the two steps and eliminate those that appear on both sides to get the net reaction: NO2(g) + NO2(g) + NO3(g) + CO(g) → NO(g) + NO3(g) + NO2(g) + CO2(g) net reaction (ii): NO2(g) + CO(g) → NO(g) + CO2(g) ACS Chemistry FROG 79 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 Pathway (iii) is the same as pathway (ii), with a different slow step, so the net reaction is the same: net reaction (iii): NO2(g) + CO(g) → NO(g) + CO2(g) (b) For reaction pathway (i), the single-step reaction written is the elementary reaction with: rate (i) = k(i)[NO2(g)][CO(g)] For reaction pathway (ii), the equilibrium is rapid, the species remain in equilibrium as the reaction proceeds and we can write (after rearranging the equilibrium constant expression): ⎛ [NO 2 (g)]2 ⎞ [NO3(g)] = K(ii) ⎜ ⎟ ⎝ [NO(g)] ⎠ The rate law for reaction pathway (ii) is given by the rate for the slow step: ⎛ [NO 2 (g)]2 ⎞ rate (ii) = k(ii)[NO3(g)][CO(g)] = k(ii)K(ii) ⎜ ⎟ [CO(g)] ⎝ [NO(g)] ⎠ For reaction pathway (iii), NO3(g) reacts as fast as it is formed and the rate law for the overall reaction will be the rate law for the slow reaction: rate (iii) = k(iii)[NO2(g)]2 (c) To distinguish among these pathways, we could vary the initial [NO2(g)] while holding [CO(g)] constant and determine the initial reaction rates to find out the order of reaction with respect to [NO2(g)]. If the reaction is found to be first order, the result would support reaction pathway (i). If the reaction is found to be second order with respect to [NO2(g)], then the evidence favors pathways (ii) and (iii). A second series of experiments varying [CO(g)] while holding [NO2(g)] constant would allow us to determine the order of reaction with respect to [CO(g)]. If there is no dependence on [CO(g)], reaction pathway (iii) is supported (if the reaction is also second order with respect to [NO2(g)]). If the reaction is first order with respect to [CO(g)] and also with respect to [NO2(g)], reaction pathway (i) is supported. If the reaction is first order with respect to [CO(g)] and second order with respect to [NO2(g)], reaction pathway (ii) is supported. If there is evidence to support reaction pathway (ii), then we could investigate the affect of adding [NO(g)] to the initial reaction mixture. If the reaction is slowed by this addition, as the rate law for pathway (ii) predicts, this is further evidence supporting pathway (ii). Remember that we can never prove that a pathway is correct; we can only show which ones are not correct, that is, are not consistent with the experimental evidence. Problem 11.34. (a) The experimentally-determined rate law for the reaction, 2NO(g) + Cl2(g) → 2NOCl(g), is rate = k[NO(g)]2[Cl2(g)]. The first step of a pathway proposed for this reaction is: NO(g) + Cl2(g) ⇔ NOCl2(g) fast equilibrium, K A second, rate-limiting step that is consistent with the overall stoichiometry of the reaction is: NOCl2(g) + NO(g) → 2NOCl(g) slow, k (b) The overall rate law predicted for this two-step pathway begins with the rate law for the slow reaction step and then substitution into this equation for any intermediate concentrations in terms of measurable reactant and product concentrations. rate = k[NOCl2(g)][NO(g)] 80 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 K= Reaction Pathways (NO(g))(Cl2 (g)) (NOCl2 (g)) ∴[NOCl2(g)]= K[Cl2(g)][NO(g)] rate = kK[Cl2(g)][NO(g)]2 = k'[Cl2(g)][NO(g)]2 (c) To distinguish experimentally between the pathway in part (a) and the one-step termolecular pathway initially suggested in the problem (which gives the same rate law), we might look for evidence of the intermediate NOCl2. Such studies are not easy, but modern rapid spectroscopic methods could be useful. Problem 11.35. (a) For the proposed pathway for the reaction, (CH3)3CCl + OH– → (CH3)3COH + Cl–, sum the reactants and products that appear in each step and eliminate those that appear on both sides to get the net reaction: (CH3)3CCl + (CH3)3C+ + H2O + (CH3)3COH2+ + OH– → (CH3)3C+ + Cl– + (CH3)3COH2+ + (CH3)3COH + H2O net reaction: (CH3)3CCl + OH– → Cl– + (CH3)3COH (b) The initial slow equilibrium step, (CH3)3CCl ⇔ (CH3)3C+ + Cl–, in the proposed pathway is rate limiting. The cation, (CH3)3C+, reacts with water almost as soon as it is formed, so the initial rate of the reaction is the rate of formation of this cation. Let kf be the rate constant for the forward reaction of (CH3)3CCl: (CH3)3CCl → (CH3)3C+ + Cl– The rate law for the overall reaction, which is limited by the rate of this reaction, is: rate = kf[(CH3)3CCl] (c) The rate law we wrote for this reaction in Problem 11.25 was first order in [(CH3)3CCl] and zero order in [OH–], so the rate law derived from this reaction pathway is consistent with what we have found experimentally. Note that we have shown the rate-limiting step in this pathway as an equilibrium reaction, but have neglected the reverse reaction reforming (CH3)3CCl from (CH3)3C+ and OH–. This is not a serious problem when we investigate only initial rates in solutions that initially contain no Cl–. What happens if we add Cl– to the solutions is discussed in Problem 11.38. Problem 11.36. (a) A possible pathway for the reaction, CH3OH + H+ + Cl– → CH3Cl + H2O, is: CH3OH + H+ ⇔ CH3OH2+ fast equilibrium, K – + CH3OH2 + Cl → CH3Cl + H2O slow, k For this reaction pathway, the equilibrium is rapid, so the species remain in equilibrium as the reaction proceeds and we can write (after rearranging the equilibrium constant expression): [CH3OH2+] = K[CH3OH][H+] The reaction rate law for the overall reaction is the rate law for the slow, rate-limiting step: rate = k[CH3OH2+][Cl–] = kK[CH3OH][H+][Cl–] ACS Chemistry FROG 81 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 (b) In this reaction system, when the hydrochloric acid, HCl, concentration was doubled, the rate of reaction quadrupled. The source of both H+ and Cl– in this system is the hydrochloric acid in the mixture. Thus, [H+] = [Cl–], and we could write the rate law as: rate = kK[CH3OH][H+]2 The rate of the reaction would quadruple as [H+] doubles, if the only source of H+ and Cl– in the system is hydrochloric acid. Problem 11.37. (a) We are asked to find the net reaction represented by each of these pathways for the decomposition of N2O5(g). (i) N2O5(g) ⇔ NO2(g) + NO3(g) fast equilibrium, K(i) NO2(g) + NO3(g) → NO(g) + NO2(g) + O2(g) slow, k(i) NO(g) + NO3(g) → 2NO2(g) fast Note that two NO3(g) are required after the initial step (one in each subsequent reaction). Thus we need to double the first reaction before adding the reactants and products and eliminating redundant species: N2O5(g) + N2O5(g) + NO2(g) + NO3(g) + NO(g) + NO3(g) → NO2(g) + NO3(g) + NO2(g) + NO3(g) + NO(g) + NO2(g) + O2(g) +2NO2(g) net reaction: N2O5(g) → 4NO2(g) + O2(g) N2O5(g) ⇔ NO2(g) + NO3(g) fast equilibrium, K(ii) NO3(g) + N2O5(g) → N2O4(g) + NO2(g) + O2(g) slow, k(ii) N2O4(g) → 2NO2(g) fast None of the intermediate species is used more than once in subsequent reactions, so we simply add reactants and products and eliminate redundant species: N2O5(g) + NO3(g) + N2O5(g) + N2O4(g) → NO2(g) + NO3(g) + N2O4(g) + NO2(g) + O2(g) + 2NO2(g) net reaction: 2N2O5(g) → 4NO2(g) + O2(g) (ii) N2O5(g) → NO2(g) + NO3(g) slow, k(iii) NO3(g) + N2O5(g) → 3NO2(g) + O2(g) fast None of the intermediate species is used more than once in subsequent reactions, so we simply add reactants and products and eliminate redundant species: N2O5(g) + NO3(g) + N2O5(g) → NO2(g) + NO3(g) + N2O4(g) + 3NO2(g) + O2(g) net reaction: 2N2O5(g) → 4NO2(g) + O2(g) (iii) The net reaction for each of the pathways is the same. (b) The rate law for each of the pathways in part (a) is found here. For reaction pathway (i), the equilibrium is rapid, so the species remain in equilibrium as the reaction proceeds and we can write (after rearranging the equilibrium constant expression): ⎛ [N O ( g)] ⎞ [NO3(g)] = K(i) ⎜ 2 5 ⎟ ⎝ [NO 2 ( g) ] ⎠ 82 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways The reaction rate law for the overall reaction is the rate law for the slow, rate-limiting step: ⎛ ⎞ rate (i) = k(i)[NO3(g)][NO2(g)] = k(i)K(i) ⎜ [N 2 O 5 (g )] ⎟ [NO2(g)] = k(i)K(i)[N2O5(g)] ⎝ [NO 2 ( g )] ⎠ The first step in reaction pathway (ii) is the same as in (i) – with a different equilibrium constant – and the reaction rate law for the overall reaction is the rate law for the slow, rate limiting step: ⎛ [N O ( g)] ⎞ ⎛ [N2 O5 ( g)]2 ⎞ [N O (g)] = k K rate (ii) = k(ii)[NO3(g)][N2O5(g)] = k(ii)K(ii) ⎜ 2 5 2 5 (ii) (ii) ⎟ ⎜ ⎟ ⎝ [NO 2 ( g) ] ⎠ ⎝ [NO 2 (g )] ⎠ The first step in reaction pathway (iii) is the slow rate-limiting step, so the overall reaction rate law is: rate (iii) = k(iii)[N2O5(g)] (c) The initial rate of disappearance of N2O5(g) was found to be a linear function of the initial concentration of N2O5(g). If the rate of a reaction increases in direct proportion to the increase in a reactant concentration (linearly with respect to the concentration), the reaction is first order with respect to the reactant concentration. In the present case, the rate law suggested by the experimental result is: rate = k[N2O5(g)] (d) Reaction pathway (ii), which predicts a rate law that is second order with respect to [N2O5(g)], is ruled out by the result in part (c). (e) To help distinguish between the proposed pathways (i) and (iii), we might consider adding NO2(g) to the initial reaction mixture. This addition should have no affect on the rate of reaction by pathway (iii), since NO2(g) is not involved as a reactant in any step. The simple assumption we make about reaction pathway (i) is that the initial equilibrium is maintained. If this is not quite true, then the addition of NO2(g) might have an affect on the reaction rate. Without a more detailed analysis, we cannot predict the direction of the affect, but either an increase or decrease in the rate would suggest that NO2(g) is involved as more than simply a product in the reaction pathway and this is consistent with pathway (i). Problem 11.38. In a continuing study of the system discussed in Problems 11.15, 11.25, and 11.35, a series of experiments was carried out in which salt, sodium chloride, was dissolved in reaction mixtures which were otherwise identical. The initial concentration of hydroxide ion, [OH–]0, was 0.0025 M in all these experiments. expt # 1 5 6 7 8 [NaCl], M time to color change, s 0 0.85 1.71 2.56 3.42 35 35 43 95 268 (a) We get the rate of disappearance of hydroxide ion just as we did in Problems 11.15 and 11.25: ACS Chemistry FROG 83 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 rate(1) = (0 M – 0.0025 M) rate(5) = (0 M – 0.0025 M) rate(6) = (0 M – 0.0025 M) rate(7) = (0 M – 0.0025 M) rate(8) = (0 M – 0.0025 M) (35 s) (35 s) (43 s) (95 s) = – 7.1 × 10–5 M·s–1 = – 7.1 × 10–5 M·s–1 = – 5.8 × 10–5 M·s–1 = – 2.6 × 10–5 M·s–1 (268 s) = – 0.93 × 10–5 M·s–1 (b) The rate of disappearance of (CH3)3CCl is the same as the rate of disappearance of hydroxide ion, as we have reasoned in Problem 11.15. As more sodium chloride is dissolved in the solution, the rate of disappearance of (CH3)3CCl decreases. The presence of sodium cations, Na+, and/or chloride anions, Cl–, in the solution slows the reaction of (CH3)3CCl. (c) The reaction pathway proposed in Problem 11.35 for the reaction of (CH3)3CCl with water, involves a slow equilibrium reaction forming the (CH3)3C+ cation and chloride anion, Cl–. Adding chloride ion to the reaction mixture should decrease the equilibrium concentration of the (CH3)3C+ cation: ⎛ [(CH3 )3 CCl]⎞ [(CH3)3C+] = K ⎜ ⎟ ⎠ ⎝ [Cl – ] If less reactant is formed, the reaction will slow down. Thus, it seems reasonable to conclude that the added chloride anion from the sodium chloride is responsible for the observed decrease in reaction rate in this system. The affect of added chloride strengthens the case for the reaction pathway proposed in Problem 11.35. Problem 11.39. (a) In acidic solutions, the reaction between hydrogen peroxide and iodide and its rate law are: H2O2(aq) + 2I–(aq) + 2H+(aq) → I2(aq) + 2H2O(aq) rate = k[H2O2(aq)][I–(aq)][H+(aq)] Since H2O2(aq) is a weak Brønsted-Lowry base, hydronium ions can transfer protons to it in acidic solution: H2O2(aq) + H3O+(aq) ⇔ H3O2+(aq) + H2O(aq) (b) The rate limiting step for reaction in acidic solution, assuming it is analogous to the rate limiting step in pH 7 solution, reaction (11.31), is: H3O2+(aq) + I–(aq) → HOI(aq) + H2O(aq) (c) For the reaction HOI(aq) + H2O2(aq) → O2(g) + I–(aq) + H+(aq) + H2O(aq), an increase in hydronium ion concentration (lower pH) will make the reaction less favorable. We are disturbing the system by adding a product and Le Chatelier’s principle says that the system will respond by trying to use up the product, that is, by proceeding in reverse, thus making the reaction as written less favorable. Use the Nernst equation for this reaction at 298 K, with Eo′ = 0.5 V, to get Eo, the potential at pH 0: 84 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Eo′ = Eo – Reaction Pathways (0.05916 V) log ⎛ (O2 (aq ))(I– (aq))(H + (aq ))(H 2O(aq )) ⎞ ⎜ ⎝ n o (0.5 V) = E – (0.05916 V) 2 (HOI(aq ))(H 2 O 2 (aq )) ⎟ ⎠ ⎛ (1)(1)(10–7 )(1) ⎞ o log ⎜ ⎟ = E + (0.2 V) ⎠ ⎝ (1)(1) o E = (0.5 V) – (0.2 V) = 0.3 V The driving force for the reaction has decreased in acidic solution as we reasoned from Le Chatelier’s principle as well. (d) Find the cell potential for this reaction at pH 0: HOI(aq) + I–(aq) + H+(aq) → I2(aq) + H2O(l) The appropriate half reactions are: 2HOI(aq) + 2H+(aq) + 2e– ⇔ 2H2O(aq) + I2(aq) Eo = 1.430 V I2(aq) + 2e– ⇔ 2I–(aq) Eo = 0.5355 V The standard cell potential, Eo, for the reaction is 0.894 V [= (1.430 V) – (0.5355 V)]. (e) The driving force for the reaction producing iodine, part (d), instead of oxygen, part (c), as the oxidized product of the hydrogen peroxide-iodide reaction at pH 0, is almost 0.6 V greater. Thermodynamically, the production of iodine is greatly favored in the acidic solution. This helps to explain the difference in reaction at neutral and acidic pH. (f) A reaction pathway that is consistent with the stoichiometry of the reaction and the rate law is: H2O2(aq) + H3O+(aq) ⇔ H3O2+(aq) + H2O(aq) rapid acid-base equilibrium H3O2+(aq) + I–(aq) → HOI(aq) + H2O(aq) slow rate limiting reaction + + HOI(aq) + H3O (aq) ⇔ H2OI (aq) + H2O(aq) rapid acid-base equilibrium + – H2OI (aq) + I (aq) → I2(aq) + H2O(aq) rapid nucleophile-electrophile reaction Problem 11.40. (a) The oxidized iodine atom in HOI(aq) and the reduced atom in I–(aq) are the pair that couple the reactions (11.21) and (11.22). HOI is formed from I–(aq) [and H2O2(aq)] in the first reaction and reacts in the second reaction to reform I–(aq). (b) The coupling diagram (patterned after Figures 10.12, 1014, and 10.15) is: oxidized reduced H2 O2 I– OH– HOI reduced oxidized oxidized H2O + O2 + H+ H2 O2 reduced Note that hydrogen peroxide can act as both an oxidizing agent (when the oxidation numbers of its oxygen atoms are reduced from –1 to a –2) and as a reducing agent (when the oxidation numbers of its oxygen atoms are increased from –1 to 0). In this reaction, iodide catalyzes the self-reduction-oxidation (disproportionation) of hydrogen peroxide molecules. (c) The net reaction for this system contains neither I–(aq) nor HOI(aq). Thus, what we said in Chapter 10 is true for this case as well: coupling species do not appear in the net reaction for the coupled series of reactions. Note that the rate law does contain the concentration of iodide ACS Chemistry FROG 85 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 anion, [I–(aq)], since it is involved in the rate limiting part of the reaction pathway. This is one more example of the fact that the rate law and stoichiometry for a reaction are not simply related. Problem 11.41. (a) Two possible pathways for the gas phase reaction of iodine and hydrogen are: (i) H2(g) + I2(g) ⇔ 2HI(g) k(i) (ii) I2(g) ⇔ I(g) + I(g) fast equilibrium, K(ii) H2(g) +I(g) + I(g) → 2HI(g) slow, k(ii) For reaction pathway (i), the reaction written is an elementary reaction and we can immediately write its rate law as: rate (i) = k(i)[H2(g)][I2(g)] For reaction pathway (ii), the equilibrium is rapid, so the species remain in equilibrium as the reaction proceeds and we can write (after rearranging the equilibrium constant expression and solving for [I(g)]): [I(g)] = K (ii) [I2 (g)] The reaction rate law is derived from the rate law for the rate limiting reaction: rate (ii) = k(ii)[H2(g)][I(g)][I(g)] = k(ii)[H2(g)]( K (ii) [I2 (g)] )( K (ii) [I2 (g)] ) rate (ii) = k(ii)K(ii)[H2(g)][I2(g)] Thus, we see that both pathways lead to the same form of the rate law. (b) Molecules in the gas phase are far apart and collisions between two of them are relatively rare. It is highly improbable that during the very short time two molecules are in contact during a collision a third molecule would collide with the pair. Thus three-body collisions among gas phase molecules are quite rare. A reaction that depends on such events will be very slow. Alternatively, if two molecules (or a molecule and an atom) collide and stick together for an appreciable time before separating, there is a much greater likelihood that a third particle will collide with the pair before they separate. Iodine atoms are large and their electron cloud is relatively easily deformed (they are polarizable), so they are pretty “sticky” in dispersion force interactions with other species. It would not be surprising that an iodine atom and a hydrogen molecule would collide and stick together longer than if they collided like hard particles. Thus, we might write pathway (ii) as: fast equilibrium, K(ii) I2(g) ⇔ I(g) + I(g) H2(g) +I(g) ⇔ H2I(g) fast equilibrium, Kcollision H2I(g) +I(g) → 2HI(g) slow, k(ii) Show that this reaction pathway gives the same form of the rate law as the other two pathways. Problem 11.42. (a) The net reaction of atmospheric ozone with nitric oxide and its rate law are: O3(g) + NO(g) → NO2(g) + O2(g) ∆ [O 3 (g) ] – = k[O3(g)][NO(g)] ∆t 86 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways Two pathways proposed for this reaction are: (i) O3(g) + NO(g) → O(g) + NO3(g) O(g) + O3(g) → 2O2(g) NO3(g) + NO(g) → 2NO2(g) slow, k(i) fast fast (ii) O3(g) ⇔ O(g) + O2(g) fast equilibrium, K(ii) NO(g) + O(g) → NO2(g) slow, k(ii) The net reaction represented by pathway (i) is obtained by adding all the reactants and products and canceling those that appear on both sides of the resulting reaction: O3(g) + NO(g) + O(g) + O3(g) + NO3(g) + NO(g) → O(g) + NO3(g) + 2O2(g) + 2NO2(g) 2O3(g) +2NO(g) → 2O2(g) + 2NO2(g) O3(g) + NO(g) → O2(g) + NO2(g) The stoichiometry of pathway (i) agrees with the overall stoichiometry of the reaction. The net reaction represented by pathway (ii) is obtained by adding all the reactants and products and canceling those that appear on both sides of the resulting reaction: O3(g) + NO(g) + O(g) → O(g) + O2(g) + NO2(g) O3(g) + NO(g) → O2(g) + NO2(g) The stoichiometry of pathway (ii) agrees with the overall stoichiometry of the reaction. (b) The rate law for pathway (i) is the rate law for the slow step: rate = k(i)[O3(g)][NO(g)] For reaction pathway (ii), the equilibrium is rapid, so the species remain in equilibrium as the reaction proceeds and we can write (after rearranging the equilibrium constant expression and solving for [O(g)]): ⎞ ⎛ O (g) [O(g)] = K(ii) ⎜ [ 3 ] O (g) ⎝ [ 2 ]⎟⎠ ⎛ O (g) ⎞ rate = k(ii)[NO(g)][O(g)] = k(ii)[NO(g)]K(ii) ⎜ [ 3 ] O (g) ⎝ [ 2 ]⎟⎠ ⎛ O (g) ⎞ = k'[NO(g] ⎜ [ 3 ] O (g) ⎝ [ 2 ]⎟⎠ The rate law predicted for pathway (i) agrees with the observed rate, but that for pathway (ii) does not. This means that pathway (i) could be the correct pathway but pathway (ii) is excluded. (c) Another pathway that gives the correct net reaction and rate law is a single-step bimolecular reaction between the two reactants: O3(g) + NO(g) → O2(g) + NO2(g) Show that this pathway does give the correct net reaction and rate law. Problem 11.43. The horizontal lines shown on the graph in Figure 11.6(b) are spaced 0.7([0.693 = ln2) units apart. The spacing between lines is the spacing between values that represent half-lives for the ACS Chemistry FROG 87 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 decay. If the counts per minute (cpm) at one time is N, then the counts per minute one half-life later will be N/2. On the ln(cpm) scale, this difference is: ⎛ N ⎞ difference = lnN – ln(N/2) = ln ⎜ ⎟ = ln2 ⎝ N / 2⎠ Problem 11.44. We can use data from Figure 11.6 to find out how long we would have to keep a collection of 32 P waste to assure that its radioactivity is under 1% of the starting value. We can write the equation for the experimental line in Figure 11.6(b) as: lnN = (slope)t + lnN0 Rearrange to: ln(N/N0) = (slope)t The data in the figure caption tell us that (slope) = –4.85 × 10–2 day–1. Substitute this value into the equation, together with N/N0 = 0.01 (decay to 1% of the starting activity), to get: t= ln (N / N 0 ) slope = ln(0.01) = 95 day (–4.85 × 10 –2 day –1 ) Ninety-five days is a little less than 14 weeks [= (95 day)/(7 day·week–1], so 14 weeks or a little over three months is how long you will have to store the 32P waste before it can be discarded as trash. Problem 11.45. We can use data from Check This 11.37 to find the age of an archaeological specimen of bone that has a carbon-14 radioactivity of 2.93 counts·min–1. Use equation (11.41), kt1/2 = 0.693, and substitute the carbon-14 half-life of 5730 yr to determine: 0.693 0.693 k= = = 1.21 × 10–4 yr–1 t1/2 5730 yr For a first order radioactive decay, we know that the number of counts, N (proportional to the number of radioactive nuclei), at any time is related to the number of counts at the initial time, N0: ln(N/N0) = –kt For this sample of bone (presumed to begin with an activity of 12.4 cpm) we get an age of: t= ln (N / N 0 ) –k = ln [(2.93 cpm)/(12.4 cpm)] –1.21 × 10 –4 yr –1 = 11.9 × 103 yr Problem 11.46. An antibiotic, A, is metabolized in the body by a first order reaction: ∆ (concentration of A) = k(concentration of A) – ∆t The rate constant, k, depends upon temperature and body mass. At 37 °C, k = 3.0 × 10–5 s–1 for a 70-kg person. (a) In order to calculate how frequently a 70-kg person must take 400-mg pills of the antibiotic, in order to be sure to keep the concentration of antibiotic from falling below 140 mg per 70 kg 88 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways body weight, we neglect the time between ingestion of the first and second pill, because the patient begins with none of the antibiotic in his/her system. Assume that the second pill is taken when the concentration of the antibiotic has fallen to 140 mg per 70 kg body mass (as will be the case for all subsequent ingestions). The ingestion of the pill immediately raises the concentration to 540 mg per 70 kg body mass and we want to know how long it will take for the concentration to fall to 140 mg per 70 kg body mass, which is when the next pill should be taken. The time between taking pills should be (where C is the concentration of the antibiotic in mg per 70 kg): ( C )= ln ((140 mg per 70 kg) (540 mg per 70 kg))= 4.5 × 10 s ≈ 12 hr ln C t= 4 0 –k –3.0 × 10 –5 s –1 (b) The rate constant for metabolizing the antibiotic is larger (the reaction is faster) at the higher temperature, 39 °C, so we need to substitute the larger rate constant to find the time between pills for a person with a fever: ln (140 mg per 70 kg) (540 mg per 70 kg) t= = 3.4 × 104 s ≈ 9 hr –5 –1 –4.0 × 10 s The time comes out about 9.4 hr, but, to be on the safe side, we round down to be sure there is always enough antibiotic in the patient’s system. ( ) Problem 11.47. We can test whether a reaction is first order by plotting the logarithm of the concentration of the reactant as a function of time. If the resulting plot is linear, the reaction is first order. Because we are taking logarithms, the concentrations should be expressed as dimensionless ratios, but the standard state value chosen for the ratio will not affect the slope or linearity of the plot (it will affect the intercept of the plot). Thus, for simplicity, we often simply take the logarithms of the numerical concentration values and neglect their units. In the present case, for the decomposition of gaseous dimethyl ether, (CH3)2O(g) → CH4(g) + H2(g) + CO(g), at 504 °C, we have: time, sec 0 390 777 1195 3175 35.1 29.8 24.9 10.4 pressure (CH3)2O(g), kPa 41.5 3.56 3.39 3.21 2.34 ln(pressure (CH3)2O(g)) 3.73 The plot of these data is: ACS Chemistry FROG 89 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 4.0 ln(P) = -0.000438t+ 3.73 ln(P) 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500 time, s The plot is linear, so the reaction appears to be first order, with a rate constant, k = 4.38 × 10-4 s 1, from the slope of the line. Problem 11.48. Cyclopropane, C3H6(g), isomerizes to propene, CH3CH=CH2(g), in a first order reaction with a rate constant of 6.0 × 10–4 s–1 at 773 K. To find the pressure of propene in a reaction vessel after 15 minutes, beginning with a cyclopropane pressure of 56.7 kPa, let P0 be the pressure of the cyclopropane at time zero and Pt the cyclopropane pressure at some later time, t. Since the reaction is first order, we can write: ln P1 = –kt P0 ( ) After 15.0 minutes (900. s) of reaction, starting with 56.7 kPa of cyclopropane, we have: ln Pt = –(6.0 × 10–4 s–1)(900. s) = –0.54 (56.7 kPa) ( ) (P (56.7 kPa))= 0.58 t Pt = 33 kPa Therefore, about 24 kPa [= P0 – Pt = (56.7 kPa) – (33 kPa)] of cyclopropane has reacted and, since one molecule of propene is formed for every molecule of cyclopropane that reacts, this will produce 24 kPa of propene. Problem 11.49. Bacteria in a nutrient medium cause it to be cloudy: the more bacteria, the cloudier the medium. The number (concentration) of bacteria in a nutrient medium is sometimes determined by measuring the absorbance of the medium, which is directly proportional to the number of bacteria present. These are data for a bacterial growth experiment. 90 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways time, min 0 15 30 45 60 absorbance 0.053 0.095 0.167 0.301 0.533 During the part of their growth called the “log phase,” the rate law for bacterial growth is: ∆ (number of bacteria) = k(number of bacteria) ∆t (a) The equation for bacterial growth has a positive sign because the change in number of bacteria is positive; as time increases, the number increases, ∆(number of bacteria) > 0. (b) The derivation of the equation for the number of bacteria as a function of time is identical to that in the text for the first order disappearance of a reactant with the negative sign on f replaced by a positive and growth rather than decay described at each step. Here, let’s use calculus to get the progress of the growth with time. Let N be the number of bacteria at any time. We rewrite the rate equation in terms of infinitesimal changes and integrate to get the time dependence: N t dN t ∫N0 N = ∫0 kdt or ln N t = kt lnNt – lnN0 = kt N0 ( ) (c) The equation we have found in part (b) suggests plotting the logarithm of the number of bacteria as a function of time to test if the growth follows the “log phase” rate law. Since the absorbance in the bacterial solutions is directly proportional to the number of bacteria, that is, N = (constant)(absorbance), we can write: ⎤ ⎡ ln N t = ln ⎢(constant)(absorbance)t ⎥ N0 (constant)(absorbance) ⎣ 0⎦ ( ) ⎤ ⎡ ln ⎢(absorbance)t = kt (absorbance)0 ⎦⎥ ⎣ ln(absorbance)t = kt + ln(absorbance)0 Plots of the (absorbance)t and ln(absorbance)t as a function of time are: ACS Chemistry FROG 91 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 0.6 -0.5 ln(absorbance) = 0.0385t – 2.94 -1.0 ln(absorbance) absorbance 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 -1.5 -2.0 -2.5 0.1 0 -3.0 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 time, min 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 time, min The equation we derived shows that the rate constant for the growth is the slope of the line on the ln(absorbance) vs. time graph: k = 0.0385 min–1. This growth phase is called the “log phase” because the logarithm of the number of cells increases linearly during this time. (d) From part (b), we can write: ln N t = kt N0 ( ) If the number of bacteria double during this time interval, then Nt = 2N0. If we let the time required for the doubling be t2, then we get: ln 2N 0 = ln2 = 0.693 = kt2 N0 ( ) For the growth in this problem, the doubling time is: 0.693 t2 = = 18 min (0.0385 min –1 ) (e) Since the doubling time in the second nutrient medium is shorter than in the first, we can conclude that the bacteria grow faster in the second medium. The second medium is more favorable for the growth of the bacteria. It must contain nutrients that are more suitable for these bacteria. Problem 11.50. From the solution for Problem 11.49(d), we know that the doubling time for log phase bacterial growth is t2 = 0.693 . If we assume that the bacteria in freshly pasteurized milk are in their log k phase growth, we get; 0.693 0.693 = = 1.7 × 10–2 hr–1 k= t2 40 hr Use k to find the number of bacteria at 10 days (240 hr), beginning with 2.0 × 104 bacteria·mL–1 at time zero: 92 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways ( N) ln N t 0 ⎛ ⎞ –2 –1 = ln ⎜⎜ N t 4 –1 ⎟ ⎟ = kt = (1.7 × 10 hr )(240 hr) = 4.08 2.0 × 10 bacteria ⋅ mL )⎠ ⎝ ( ⎛N ⎞ ⎜⎜ t 4 –1 ⎟ ⎟ = 59.1 ⎝ (2.0 × 10 bacteria ⋅ mL )⎠ Nt = 1.2 × 106 bacteria·mL–1 Problem 11.51. (a) The data for this problem are from Eyring and Daniels, JACS 1930, 52, 1472, as reported in E. L. King, How Chemical Reactions Occur (Benjamin, New York, 1964). Using the stoichiometry of the reaction, 2N2O5(CCl4) → 4NO2(CCl4) + O2(g), King recalculated the data from the literature to convert from volume of oxygen gas evolved as a function of time to amount of the reactant decomposed as a function of time. time, min 0 184 319 526 867 1198 1877 [N2O5(CCl4)], M 2.33 2.08 1.91 1.67 1.35 1.11 0.72 ⎤ ⎡ The experiment took 31.28 hours ⎢= (1877 min) –1 ⎥ , which is about 1.3 days. (The ⎢⎣ (60 min ⋅ hr )⎥⎦ final point was probably taken when the reaction had been left to run overnight, about 11 hours, after the penultimate point was taken.) (b) A concentration vs. time graph and a ln(concentration) vs. time graph (assuming first order dependence on [N2O5(CCl4)]) are shown here: 2.5 1.0 ln[N2O5] = -6.25x10^-4*t + 0.846 0.8 2.0 1.5 ln[N2O5] [N2O5], M 0.6 1.0 0.4 0.2 0.0 0.5 -0.2 0.0 -0.4 0 400 800 1200 time, min 1600 2000 0 400 800 1200 time, min 1600 2000 The curve through the points on the [N2O5] vs. time plot is an exponential curve through these experimental points. The plot of ln[N2O5] vs. time is used to test whether the reaction is first order and the best linear fit to the data is shown. These data fit a first order decay very well with a rate constant k = 6.25 × 10–4 min–1 from the slope of the line. (c) The first order dependence found in part (b) is also the conclusion for the gas phase reaction from Problem 11.37. ACS Chemistry FROG 93 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 (d) The reaction stoichiometry shows that each mole of N2O5 that decomposes produces 0.5 mole of O2(g). The number of moles of N2O5 that decompose in the first 184 minutes in 25.0 mL of solution and the number of moles of O2(g) formed are: mole N2O5 decomposed = [(2.33 M) – (2.08 M)](0.0250 L) = 6.25 × 10–3 mol mole O2(g) formed = 0.5(6.25 × 10–3 mol) = 3.13 × 10–3 mol Use the ideal gas equation, PV = nRT, to find the volume occupied by this many moles of oxygen gas at 318 K (45 °C) and 96.5 kPa pressure: nRT (3.13 × 10 –3 mol)(8.314 L ⋅ kPa ⋅ K –1mol–1 )(318 K) V= = = 85.8 × 10–3 L P 96.5 kPa V = 85.8 × 10–3 L = 85.8 mL The total number of moles of N2O5 that decompose during the reaction is 4.03 × 10–3 mol, which produce 551 mL of O2(g). Problem 11.52. Compare the expressions for 99% to 90% completion for a first order reaction: ln ⎛⎝ N99 N ⎞⎠ − kt99 t ln(0.01) 0 = =2= = 99 N − kt90 t90 ln(0.1) ln ⎛⎝ 90 N ⎞⎠ 0 The time required for 99% completion is twice that required for 90% completion. It takes the same length of time to go from 90% to 99% completion (that is, to react 90% of the reactant remaining after 90% of the reaction) as to go from the beginning of the reaction to 90% completion. This makes sense, since 90% of the starting amount of reactant is reacting in each case. You can think of this time as the “90% life” by analogy with the half-life of a first order reaction. Problem 11.53. (a) Use the Arrhenius equation to compare reaction rates (and hence the rate constants, since the concentration factors will cancel out in the ratio) at different temperatures and to determine the activation energy for the reaction. In this case, the temperatures are 328 K (55 °C) and 308 K (35 °C): – Ea R⋅328 K ⎛ E ⎞⎛ 1 1 ⎞ ⎟ –⎜ a ⎟ ⎜ – rate 328 k328 Ae ⎠ ⎠⎝ = 6.7 = = = e ⎝ R 328 K 308 K Ea – rate 308 k308 Ae R⋅328 K Ea ⎞ ⎛ 308 K – 328 K ⎞ ln(6.7) = – ⎛⎝ ⎟ –1 –1 ⎠ ⎜ 8.314 J ⋅ K ⋅ mol ⎝ (308 K)(328 K) ⎠ Ea = 8.0 × 104 J·mol–1 = 80. kJ·mol–1 (b) Let the temperature for doubling the rate of reaction at 308 K be T2, so we can write: ⎛ 8.0 × 104 J ⋅ mol –1 ⎞ ⎛ 1 1 ⎞ ln(2) = – ⎜ – –1 –1 ⎟ ⎜ ⎝ 8.314 J ⋅ K ⋅ mol ⎠ ⎝ T2 308 K ⎟⎠ T2 = 315 K 94 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways Problem 11.54. (a) The rate constants have units of s–1, which are the units for first order rate constants, so we can infer that the reaction, 2NOCl(g) → 2NO(g) + Cl2(g), was found to be first order. (b) Use the Arrhenius equation to compare the reaction rate constants at different temperatures and to determine the activation energy for the reaction: ⎛ k400 ⎞ ⎛ 6.9 × 10 –4 s–1 ⎞ Ea ⎛ ⎞ ⎛ 350 K – 400 K ⎞ ln ⎜ ⎟ ⎟ = ln ⎜⎝ –6 –1 ⎟ = 4.3 = – ⎝ –1 –1 ⎠ ⎜ ⎝ k350 ⎠ 9.4 × 10 s ⎠ 8.314 J ⋅ K ⋅ mol ⎝ (350 K)(400 K) ⎠ Ea = 1.0 × 105 J·mol–1 = 1.0 × 102 kJ·mol–1 (c) The Arrhenius frequency factor is obtained by substituting Ea into either one of the rate constant expressions: k400 = 6.9 × 10–4 s–1 = A e A = 7.9 × 109 s–1 – 1.0 ×105 J ⋅ mol –1 (8.314 J ⋅ K –1 ⋅ mol –1 )(400 K) Problem 11.55. Rate constants for the reaction, 2N2O5 → 4NO2 + O2, at two temperatures in the gas phase and in carbon tetrachloride solution are: 25 °C gas phase CCl4 solution 45 °C 3.38 × 10 min 4.69 × 10–5 min–1 –5 –1 43.0 × 10–5 min–1 Problem 11.51(b) (a) Use the Arrhenius equation to compare the reaction rate constants at different temperatures and to determine the activation energy and then the Arrhenius frequency factor for the reaction: ⎛k ⎞ ⎛ 43.0 × 10–5 min–1 ⎞ Ea ⎛ ⎞ ⎛ 298 K – 318 K⎞ ln ⎜ 318 ⎟ = ln ⎜ ⎟ –5 –1 ⎟ = 2.54 = – ⎝ –1 –1 ⎠ ⎜ ⎝ 3.38 × 10 min ⎠ ⎝ k298 ⎠ 8.314 J ⋅ K ⋅ mol ⎝ (298 K)(318 K) ⎠ Ea = 1.00 × 105 J·mol–1 = 100. kJ·mol–1 k318 = 43.0 × 10–5 min–1 = A e A = 1.15 × 1013 min–1 – 1.00 ×10 5 J ⋅ mol –1 (8.314 J ⋅ K –1 ⋅ mol –1 )(318 K) (b) For the reaction in solution, we have: ⎛k ⎞ ⎛ 62.5 × 10 –5 min –1 ⎞ Ea ⎛ ⎞ ⎛ 298 K – 318 K⎞ ln ⎜ 318 ⎟ = ln ⎜ ⎟ –5 –1 ⎟ = 2.59 = – ⎝ –1 –1 ⎠ ⎜ ⎝ 4.69 × 10 min ⎠ ⎝ k298 ⎠ 8.314 J ⋅ K ⋅ mol ⎝ (298 K)(318 K) ⎠ Ea = 1.02 × 105 J·mol–1 = 102 kJ·mol–1 k318 = 62.5 × 10–5 min–1 = A e A = 3.58 × 1013 min–1 – 1.02 ×10 5 J ⋅ mol –1 (8.314 J ⋅ K –1 ⋅ mol –1 )(318 K) (c) The rate parameters for this reaction in the gas phase and in solution are very similar. Within the experimental uncertainty, the activation energy is the same under both conditions. The frequency factor is about three times higher in the solution, which is not a very large effect. ACS Chemistry FROG 95 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 Problem 11.56. This image is from “Sssss is for danger” New Scientist, 11 December 1999 (#2216), p. 31. Probably from the research of Don Owings, University of California, Davis and/or Matthew Rowe, Appalachian State University, North Carolina. Although we do not know the reaction pathway responsible for the snake’s rattling, we can write a rate equation: rate = rattle frequency = f = k(snake) In the equation, (snake) is some function of the concentrations of the molecules that enable the snake to rattle and is a constant for a given snake species. If we take the logarithm of this equation, we get: E E lnf = lnk +ln(snake) = lnA – a + ln(snake) = – a + constant RT RT A plot of lnf as a function of 1/T should be a straight line with a slope –Ea/R. (We really should express the variables f and (snake) as dimensionless quantities, in order to be mathematically correct in out use of logarithms, but we don’t know what the standard state is for this system. This does not matter for determining whether the data give a linear plot and obtaining the slope to get Ea, because the appropriate standard state factors will end up in the constant.) Counting the number of rattles per 0.20 s in the figure and multiplying by five gives these data: temperature (T) °C 10 18 27 35 96 frequency (f) rattles·s–1 T K 1/T 103 K–1 lnf 50 80 135 180 283 291 300 308 3.53 3.44 3.33 3.25 3.91 4.38 4.91 5.19 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways The plot of lnf vs. 1/T is: 5.5 B ln(f) = -(4.61x103 K)(1/T) + 20.2 ln(frequency) 5.0 B 4.5 B 4.0 B 3.5 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 1000/T, K–1 The slope of this plot gives Ea = 38 ± 2 kJ·mol–1 [= (4.61 × 103 K)(8.314 J·mol–1·K–1)]. (The uncertainty represents the uncertainty in our ability to read the data.) Problem 11.57. The origin of this problem is a part of the “Newscripts” column in Chemical & Engineering News, 07 February 2000. p. 88. The study was carried out by John McGregor at Louisiana State University and sponsored by Dairy Management, Inc., Rosemont, IL, an organization dedicated to getting people to use more dairy products. The result reported was that “milk should be stored at no more than 40 °F. Every 5 °F increase in storage temperature cuts shelf life by half.” Thus, the rate of decay doubles for every 5 °F increase in temperature. The only factor that varies is the rate constant, so we can take the ratio of rates as the ratio of rate constants for whatever temperatures we choose. The “data” suggest that the rate of spoilage at 45 °F (7.2 °C = 280.2 K) is twice that at 40 °F (4.4 °C = 277.4 K): − Ea R⋅280.2 − Ea R⋅280.2 k rate at 280.2 K = 2 = 280.2 = Ae Ea = e Ea − − k 277.4 rate at 277.4 K Ae R⋅277.4 e R⋅277.4 Taking logarithms gives: Ea ⎞ ⎛ Ea ⎞ E 277.4 – 280.2 –1⎞ ln 2 = 0.69 = ⎛⎝ – = – a⎛ K − ⎝– ⎠ ⎠ ⎠ R ⋅ 280.2 R ⋅ 277.4 R ⎝ 280.2 ⋅ 277.4 ⎛ 280.2 ⋅ 277.4 K⎞ = 160 kJ·mol–1 Ea = –0.69 (8.314 J·K–1·mol–1) ⎝ 277.4 – 280.2 ⎠ Problem 11.58. (a) Raw (unpasteurized) milk sours in about 9 hours at 20 °C (room temperature), but it takes about 48 hours to sour in a refrigerator at °5 C. The reasoning here to find the activation energy for souring of raw milk is essentially the same as in Problem 11.57. In this case the rates of souring are directly proportional to the inverse of the time so: ACS Chemistry FROG 97 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 1 rate at 293 K (9 hr) = = 5.33 1 rate at 278 K (48 hr) E 278 – 293 –1⎞ K ln(5.33) = 1.67 = – a ⎛⎝ ⎠ R 293 ⋅ 278 ⎛ 293 ⋅ 278 K⎞ = 76 kJ·mol–1 Ea = –1.67 (8.314 J·K–1·mol–1) ⎝ 278 – 293 ⎠ (b) The activation energy for souring raw milk is about half that required to spoil (sour) pasteurized milk (from Problem 11.57). The souring is a result of bacterial growth and action in the milk. Perhaps, pasteurization kills most of the bacteria that are most active in the souring process, so only ones that act by a different, higher activation energy pathway are left to sour the pasteurized milk. Problem 11.59. (a) We get the rate constant for cyclopentadiene dimer dissociation by substituting the known (given) values for the frequency factor, activation energy, and desired temperature (200 °C = 473 K) in the Arrhenius equation: k = (1.3 × 10 s ) e 13 –1 – 146 ×103 J ⋅ mol –1 (8.314 J ⋅ K –1 ⋅ mol –1 )(473 K ) = 9.8 × 10–4 s–1 (b) The units for A (and, hence, k) tell us that this is a first order reaction, so we can write the rate as: ∆P – dimer = kPdimer ∆t The rate at 473 K (200 °C) is 9.8 × 10–4 kPa·s–1 (c) We wish to know how long it takes for 10% of the reactant to react in this first order reaction. Stated another way, we want to know how long it will take for the initial pressure of the reactant, P0, to decrease to 90% of the initial value, 0.9P0. We can write this alternative problem (for a first order reaction) as: ⎛ 0.9P0 ⎞ –4 –1 ln ⎜ ⎟ = ln(0.9) = –0.105 = –kt = –(9.8 × 10 s )t ⎝ P0 ⎠ t = 108 s Problem 11.60. (a) Data for the temperature dependence of the rate constant for the acid-catalyzed hydrolysis of sucrose are: 18 25 32 40 45 temperature, °C –1 –1 0.0022 0.0054 0.013 0.032 0.055 k, M ·s T, K 291 298 305 313 318 –1 0.00344 0.00336 0.00328 0.00319 0.00314 1/T, K lnk –6.12 –5.22 –4.34 3.44 –2.90 98 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways A ln(k) vs. 1/T plot of the data is shown here and gives an activation energy, Ea = 91.5 kJ·mol–1 [= (8.314 J·mol–1·K–1)(1.10 × 104)]. Substitution into the Arrhenius equation for k at 298 K gives a frequency factor of 5.9 × 1013 M–1·s–1. -2 -3 ln(k) = -1.10x10^4*(1/T) + 31.8 Ea = 91.5 kJ/mol ln(k) -4 -5 -6 -7 0.0031 0.0032 0.0033 1/T, K^-1 0.0034 0.0035 (b) The rate law for this reaction is probably first order in sucrose concentration and first order in hydronium ion concentration. We know it is second order overall, because the rate constants are given with the units of second order rate constants and it makes sense that the reactant and catalyst should enter the reaction pathway together. (c) At 37 °C we have: – 91.5 ×10 3 J ⋅ mol–1 (8.314 J ⋅ K –1mol –1 )(310 K) = 0.023 M–1·s–1 k = (5.9 × 10 M ·s ) e In a solution with [H+(aq)] = 1.0 M, k[H+(aq)] = 0.023 s–1. This is a pseudo first order reaction and rate constant (with [H+(aq)] constant during the reaction, because it is a catalyst and is not consumed). Thus, we get the half-life of sucrose from the first order equation: 0.693 = (0.023 s–1)t1/2 t1/2 = 30. s 13 –1 –1 Problem 11.61. The amount of development at each temperature is the same, so the rate of the developer reaction is proportional to the reciprocal of the amount of time required. Since the only factor that varies with temperature is the rate constant, the rate is proportional to the rate constant and we can use the rates as a stand-in for the rate constants to find the activation energy. The data are: 18 20 21 22 24 temperature, °C t = development time, min 10 9 8 7 6 –1 0.00344 0.00341 0.00340 0.00339 0.00337 1/T, K –2.30 –2.20 –2.09 –1.95 –1.79 (constant)ln(1/t) ∝ lnk A plot of these data is shown on this graph: ACS Chemistry FROG 99 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 -1.7 -1.8 ln(1/t) = -7700*(1/T) + 24 Ea = 64 kJ·mol–1 ln(1/t) -1.9 -2.0 -2.1 -2.2 -2.3 -2.4 0.00336 0.00338 0.00340 1/T, K–1 0.00342 0.00344 The slope gives an activation energy of 64 kJ·mol–1 [= (8.314 J·mol–1·K–1)(7.7 × 103)]for the developer reaction. Problem 11.62. (a) Because hydrogen peroxide is packaged in an opaque container and there is a label warning to keep it out of the light, we can infer that light will probably speed up its decomposition reaction. (b) Similarly, since we are warned to keep it away from high temperatures, we can infer that high temperatures will probably speed up the hydrogen peroxide decomposition reaction. (c) Although care is required in handling the hydrogen peroxide you obtain at the drugstore (a 3% solution), the actions listed in this problem are just those for which the product is intended. Hydrogen peroxide is used as an antibacterial agent for minor cuts and scrapes on the skin either applied by pouring it on the wound or with a cotton swab wet with the solution and for bleaching hair. Thus, with reasonable care, the solution can be used safely and effectively for such purposes. Problem 11.63. Some molecules, M, after absorbing a photon that boosts them to an excited state, M* (Chapter 4, Section 4.5), emit a photon to return to the ground state. Usually the emission is at a longer wavelength (lower energy) than the absorbed radiation. Excited molecules may also return to the ground state by transferring their energy to other molecules, Q: (i) M + hν1 → M* rate = (constant)I[M] (ii) M* → M + hν2 rate = k1[M*] (iii) M* + Q → M + Q* rate = k2[M*][Q] In some cases, Q* also loses its energy by emission of light, but in many cases it dissipates the energy in other ways. If a system containing M and Q molecules is irradiated with a constant intensity, I, of light with a frequency ν1, a steady state is reached for which the intensity of the emitted radiation, Ie, at frequency ν2, is a constant. (a) The light emitted, ν2, is at a lower energy than the light absorbed, ν1. Thus, the frequency of the emitted light must be lower, so that hν2 < hν1. 100 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways (b) If the intensity of emitted radiation, Ie, is constant at the steady state and Ie is proportional to [M*], then it must be the case that [M*] is also a constant at the steady state. Indeed, that is what the steady state means – the concentrations of all species in the system are constant (although undergoing continuous reaction). NOTE: The steady state and equilibrium conditions are similar, in that the concentrations of all species in the system are constant while the reactions continue to occur. The fundamental difference is that the equilibrium state can be maintained in an isolated system (no exchange of energy with the surroundings), but the steady state requires a continuous exchange of energy with the surroundings. If this exchange is stopped, the steady state is disrupted and the system changes to a new state in which the reactions dependent on the energy exchange no longer occur. (c) Since no concentrations are changing at the steady state, this means that the rates of formation and loss of each species must be equal. For [M*], there is one pathway for formation and two for loss. If we equate the rate of formation to the sum of the rates for loss, we get: rate formation = (constant)I[M] = rate loss = k1[M*] + k2[M*][Q] We can rearrange this equation to give: [M*]/ M] = (constant)I [ k1 + k 2[Q] (d) Since [Q] appears in the denominator of the expression for [M*]/[M], this ratio decreases as [Q] increases. If all other conditions are held constant, [M*] will decrease as [Q] increases and the emission will decrease as well. Thus, the emission is “quenched” (reduced) by the presence of Q, which is the origin of the designation “quencher” for molecules to which M* can transfer energy. Problem 11.64. Spontaneous processes (processes that are thermodynamically favored) can be quite rapid, as in acid-base reactions, or quite slow, as in the reaction of nitrogen and oxygen gases at room temperature. The rates of all processes depend upon the pathways for reaction and these depend upon the interactions of individual molecules, not on the overall thermodynamics of the reaction. There may, for example, be a substantial activation energy barrier for a highly exothermic reaction, so the reaction proceeds slowly (or undetectably) at low temperature, even though net entropy change for such a process is likely to be large and positive. Problem 11.65. Hydrogen-oxygen mixtures are highly explosive and dangerous. Yet mixtures of hydrogen and oxygen can be kept for long periods of time (perhaps millennia) without reacting. At room temperature, the pathway for the hydrogen-oxygen reaction must involve an extremely slow rate-limiting step, probably one with a high activation energy barrier. We know that raising the temperature of such a mixture causes it to explode, that is, react so rapidly that the energy released feeds the continuing reaction. This is consistent with our hypothesis that the ratelimiting step has a high activation energy. This step is likely to involve breaking strong bonds to form atoms and/or radicals that then continue the reaction. ACS Chemistry FROG 101 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 Problem 11.66. (a) For this problem we put together the information from Problem 11.59 and this one for the forward and reverse directions of cyclopentadiene dimerization (shown here) and dimer dissociation (shown in Problem 11.59): 2 The energy vs. progress of reaction diagram looks like this: (b) The difference between the activation energies in the forward and reverse directions is 76 kJ·mol–1, as noted on the diagram in part (a). This is a reasonable estimate of the standard enthalpy change for the reaction, so, for the dimerization represented in part (a), we have ∆Ho = –76 kJ·mol–1. (c) Going from two monomer molecules to the dimer involves no C–H bond changes, as we go from reactants with four C=C bonds and six C–C bonds (from the two monomer molecules) to the product with two C=C bonds and ten C–C bonds. The net change is breaking two C=C bonds and making four C–C bonds. Breaking the C=C bonds requires 1240 kJ·mol–1 (= 2·620 kJ·mol–1) and making the four C–C bonds releases 1388 kJ·mol–1 (= 2·347 kJ·mol–1). Thus, the bond enthalpies predict ∆Ho = –148 kJ·mol–1 [= (1240 kJ·mol–1) – (1388 kJ·mol–1)]. Bond enthalpies give a result that is about twice as exothermic as the activation energy data yield. It is possible that the dimer structure puts more strain on the C–C bonds than is taken into account by average bond enthalpies. This effect would decrease the absolute value of the C–C bond enthalpy and, hence, decrease the exothermicity of the reaction. More data are necessary to determine whether this is a reasonable explanation for the difference between ∆Ho determined by these two methods. (d) We determine the molar concentration of cyclopentadiene monomer liquid, by dividing the mass of C5H6 in one liter of liquid, 800 g·L–1 [= (0.8 kg·L–1)(1000 g·kg–1)] by its molar mass, 66 g·mol–1, to get 12 mol·L–1. The initial rate of the second order dimerization is: rate = k[C5H6] = (1.3 × 10 M ·s )e rate = 1.0 × 10–4 M·s–1 2 102 6 –1 –1 – 70,000 J⋅ mol –1 (8.314 J ⋅K –1 mol –1 )(298 K) ACS Chemistry FROG (12 M)2 Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways (e) To estimate the time required for 10% of the cyclopentadiene to dimerize, let us average the initial rate and the rate when 90% of the monomer remains. Substituting 10.8 M [= 0.9·(12 M)] into the above equation gives a rate = 0.8 × 10–4 M·s–1, so the average rate is 0.9 × 10–4 M·s–1. For this case, ∆[C5H6] = –1.2 M, and we can write: ∆ [C5H6 ] –1.2 M rate = – = 0.9 × 10–4 M·s–1 = – ∆t ∆t 4 ∆t = 1.3 × 10 s = 3.7 hr (f) We have found that 10% of a sample of cyclopentadiene monomer will dimerize in a little less than four hours. Thus, a chemical supplier would not be able to send the pure liquid to a chemist, since much of it would have dimerized before it arrived. (g) In Problem 11.59, we found that it takes only seconds for 10% of cyclopentadiene dimer to react to form monomer at 200 °C. At the high temperature of the distillation, 170 °C, the dimer will begin to decompose quickly to the volatile monomer, boiling point 40 °C, which leaves the distillation vessel and is condensed as the liquid monomer. It takes the monomer hours to dimerize, so, if it is used soon after it is collected, most of it will still be monomer (especially if it is kept cold, in order to make the reaction even further). Although thermodynamics favors the dimer, chemists can take advantage of the kinetics to obtain and use the less stable monomer. Problem 11.67. (a) The equilibrium constant for a reaction is the ratio of the reverse to the forward rate at equilibrium. This statement is incorrect for two reasons. 1) The equilibrium constant for an elementary reaction is the ratio of rate constants, not the rates for the forward and reverse reactions. 2) The equilibrium constant is the ratio of the forward to the reverse rate constants. (b) For a reaction with a very small equilibrium constant, the rate constant for the forward reaction is much smaller than the rate constant for the reverse reaction. This statement is correct. The forward-to-reverse rate constant ratio is the equilibrium constant, so a small equilibrium constant means kf < kr. (c) For an endothermic reaction at equilibrium, an increase in temperature decreases both the forward and reverse reaction rates, but they are equal when equilibrium is reattained. This statement is correct. An increase in temperature increases essentially all reaction rates, but, at equilibrium, the forward and reverse rates are equal. Remember, however, that the equal forward and reverse rates at the higher temperature are different yhan the equal forward and reverse rates at the lower temperature. (d) For an exothermic reaction at equilibrium, an increase in temperature increases both the forward and reverse rate constants by the same proportion. This statement is incorrect. It does not matter whether the reaction is exothermic or endothermic, the reaction rate constants do not change by the same proportion as the temperature is increased, because their activation energies are different. (In the case of an exothermic reaction, the activation energy for the forward reaction is less than the activation energy for the reverse reaction, as in Figure 11.8 or the figure in the solution to Problem 11.66, but that is not relevant to the answer here.) The ratio of the forward to the reverse rate constants is: E a ( forward) – RT ⎛ A ⎞ – (E a ( forward)– Ea (reverse)) Ae kf RT = f – E a (reverse) = ⎜ f⎟e RT kr ⎝ Ar ⎠ Ar e ACS Chemistry FROG 103 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 In general, the forward and reverse activation energies are different, so the exponential term in this expression varies with temperature. Thus, the rate constant ratio varies with temperature; the rate constants do not remain in the same proportion as temperature changes. If, in a particular case, the forward and reverse activation energies are the same, then the exponential term is unity, e0 = 1, and the rate constant ratio does not change with temperature. In this case the equilibrium constant (the ratio of the rate constants) does not change with temperature, since the overall enthalpy change for the reaction is zero. Problem 11.68. The reversible elementary reaction, A → B + C, has been studied going in the reverse direction. The reaction, as written, is endothermic with ∆Ho = 57 kJ·mol–1. When equal concentrations of B and C, both 0.046 M, were reacted at 25 °C, the initial rate of reaction was 1.12 × 10–5 M·s–1. When equilibrium was attained, the concentration of C in the solution was 0.027 M. A series of temperature studies on the rate of the reverse reaction gave an activation energy of 43 kJ·mol–1. (a) The activation energy diagram for this reaction is: Start building the diagram with ∆Ho = 57 kJ·mol–1, to get the relative energy levels of the reactants and products shown on the diagram. The reverse reaction is found to have an activation energy of 43 kJ·mol–1, which enables us to add the activation energy curve to the diagram with the reverse activation energy labeled. Finally, in order for the energies to be consistent, we get the forward activation energy, 100 kJ·mol–1, as shown. (b) In the experiment described, we begin with [B] = [C] = 0.046 M, and find that [C] = 0.027 M, when equilibrium is reached. From the stoichiometry of the reaction, we also know that, at equilibrium, [B] = 0.027 M and [A] = 0.019 M (= 0.046 M – 0.027 M). Thus, the equilibrium constant is: (B)(C) (0.027)2 K= = = 0.038 (0.019) (A) (c) We substitute the known values for the initial rate and concentrations in the rate law for the reverse reaction to get kr: rate = 1.12 × 10–5 M·s–1 = kr[B][C] = kr(0.046 M)(0.046 M) kr = 5.3 × 10–3 M–1·s–1 104 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways (d) We can calculate the rate constant for the forward reaction, kf, from the equilibrium constant and the rate constant for the reverse reaction. However, to get the correct units in the result, we have to assign units to the equilibrium constant as though we had used molarities (rather than dimensionless molarity ratios) to calculate K. In this case, the units of K are M, so we get: kf = Kkr = (0.038 M)(5.3 × 10–3 M–1·s–1) = 2.0 × 10–4 s–1 (e) Since we know the rate constants and the activation energies for the forward and reverse reactions at 298 K (25 °C), we can use the Arrhenius equation to find the frequency factors: kf 2.0 × 10 –4 s–1 Af = – Ea ( forward = (100000 J ⋅mol –1 ) = 6.8 × 1013 s–1 ) – RT (8.314 J ⋅ K –1 mol–1 )(298 K) e e kr 5.3 × 10 –3 M –1 ⋅ s–1 Ar = – Ea ( reverse = = 1.8 × 105 M–1·s–1 –1 ) – (43000 J⋅ mol ) RT –1 –1 (8.314 J⋅ K mol )(298 K) e e (f) This is an endothermic reaction, so an energy input is required for the reaction. An increase in temperature increases the energy of the system and disturbs the equilibrium. Le Chatelier’s principle predicts that the system will react to decrease the disturbance by using up some of the added energy, thus also forming more product – the equilibrium constant will increase (see part (g)). We can also reason that the activation energy for the forward reaction is larger than that for the reverse reaction and we know that the reaction with the higher activation energy is more sensitive to temperature changes; it gets larger faster as the temperature increases. Thus, kf/kr = K gets larger as temperature increases. (g) We can use the relationship written in the solution to Problem 11.67(d) to find the equilibrium constant (with units of M) at 313 K (40 °C): E a ( forward ) – RT ⎛ Af ⎞ – ( E a ( forward )– Ea ( reverse )) Af e kf RT K= = = ⎜ ⎟e E a ( reverse ) – RT kr A ⎝ ⎠ r Ar e ⎛ 6.8 × 1013 s–1 ⎞ – [(100000 J ⋅mol K= ⎜ ⎟e ⎝ 1.8 × 10 5 M–1 ⋅ s–1 ⎠ –1 )– (43000 J ⋅ mol –1 )] (8.314 J ⋅ K –1mol –1 )(313 K) = 0.12 M The equilibrium constant is higher (about three-fold higher) at the higher temperature, as we predicted in part (f). We could also use thermodynamic reasoning to find K at the higher temperature. The quantitative increase in K for a given temperature increase is given in terms of ∆Horeaction by equation (9.59) in Chapter 9, Section 9.8: ⎞⎛ ⎛ K ⎞ ⎛ ∆H o ⎞ reaction ⎟ T2 – T1 ⎜ ⎟ ln ⎜ 2 ⎟ = ⎜⎜ ⎟ ⎝ K1 ⎠ ⎝ R ⎠ ⎝ T2 ⋅ T1 ⎠ ⎛ K ⎞ ⎛ 57000 J ⋅ mol –1 ⎞ ⎛ 313 K – 298 K ⎞ ln ⎜ 313 ⎟ = ⎜ ⎟⎜ ⎟ = 1.10 ⎝ K 298 ⎠ ⎝ 8.314 J ⋅ K –1 ⋅ mol–1 ⎠ ⎝ (313 K )(298 K) ⎠ ⎛ K 313 ⎞ ⎛ K313 ⎞ = 3.01; ⎜ ⎟ = ⎝ K 298 ⎠ ⎝ 0.038 ⎠ ∴ K313 = 0.11 The result is the same (within the round-off uncertainties of the calculations) by both methods. If you look back at the derivation of equation (9.59), you will also be able to see how the frequency factors are related to the entropy change for the reaction system. Since the reaction ACS Chemistry FROG 105 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 produces two molecules from one, the entropy change should be positive. Perhaps you can calculate it to see whether this is the case. Problem 11.69. (a) A first order reaction that proceeds for a time and then reaches an unchanging concentration of the reactant has probably reached equilibrium. The reaction is still proceeding, but the reverse reaction is also going on and the forward and reverse rates are equal. (b) One experiment to do to test our explanation in part (a) is to follow the concentration of the reactant as a function of time and then plot ln[reactant] vs. time. As we know, a first order reaction with no complications would yield a straight-line plot. If the reverse reaction is going on to reform some reactant as the reaction proceeds, then the plot will not be a straight line (except, perhaps, for a short time near the start of the reaction when the concentration of products is so low that the reverse reaction is negligible). Since the reactant concentration will be larger than it would be in the absence of the reverse reaction, the ln[reactant] vs. time plot will curve upward and finally reach the constant equilibrium value for ln[reactant]. Problem 11.70. With phenolphthalein and high concentrations of hydroxide ion, [OH–(aq)], the color of the phenolphthalein dianion, P2–(aq), disappears from the solution – it all reacts by reaction (11.2) going in the forward direction: P2–(aq) + OH–(aq) → POH3–(aq). At lower [OH–(aq)], say 0.10 M, observations on this system are different. Initially, the rate of disappearance of the color is first order, rate = kexpt[P2–(aq)], where the experimental first order rate constant is, kexpt = kf[OH– (aq)], just as at the higher [OH–(aq)]. However, as the reaction proceeds, kexpt gets smaller (even though [OH-(aq)] is not changing appreciably) and the solution never completely decolorizes but comes to an unchanging light pink color. Compare these observations with the behavior described in Problem 11.69. (a) The reaction is probably at equilibrium when it reaches the final pink color. Reactant and product concentrations are unchanging. The rate of the forward reaction, P2–(aq) + OH–(aq) → POH3–(aq) equals the rate of the reverse reaction, POH3–(aq) → P2–(aq) + OH–(aq). If these are elementary reactions and the rate constants are kf and kr, respectively, the equilibrium is characterized by these relationships: POH 3– (aq )) ( kf K= = 2– kr (P (aq))(OH – (aq)) (b) The rate law for the reverse reaction is rate = kr[POH3–(aq)]. (c) The second relationship shown in part (a) can be rearranged to: kr = (P 2– (POH (aq )) 3– (aq )) kf(OH–(aq)) Comparing this equation to kr ≈ (1/10)kf[OH–(aq)] (from the problem statement) shows that, at equilibrium, with [OH–(aq)] = 0.10 M, the [P2–(aq)]/[POH3–(aq)] ratio is about 1 to 10. Approximately 10% of the phenolphthalein is present as the red form, P2–(aq), and rest as the colorless form, POH3–(aq). 106 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways (d) Since kr ≈ (1/10)kf[OH–(aq)], when [OH–(aq)] = 0.10 M, we have kf/kr ≈ 100 M–1. When [OH–(aq)] = 1.0 M, substitution into the equilibrium constant expression in part (a) gives the [P2–(aq)]/[POH3–(aq)] ratio as about 1 to 100. Under these conditions, approximately 1% of the phenolphthalein is present as the red form, P2–(aq), and rest as the colorless form, POH3–(aq), at equilibrium. With so little of the red form present, the solution appears colorless. (e) The reaction is a bond-forming process, so we would predict that energy would be released and the process would be exothermic. An activation energy diagram for the reaction would look like this: (f) Since the reaction is exothermic, the equilibrium constant will decrease with increasing temperature (Le Chatelier’s principle and the larger increase of the higher-activation-energy reverse reaction rate constant). A smaller equilibrium constant will mean a lower [POH3– (aq)]/[P2–(aq)] ratio or a higher [P2–(aq)]/[POH3–(aq)] ratio. The solution should get darker as the temperature increases and more P2–(aq) is formed. Problem 11.71. These data are initial rates (106 µmol = 1 mol) of an enzyme-catalyzed reaction measured with the same amount of enzyme and varying initial concentrations of substrate, S. [S]0, M 2.0 × 10–2 2.0 × 10–3 2.0 × 10–4 1.5 × 10–4 1.3 × 10–5 V0, µmol·min–1 60 60 48 45 12 (a) Vmax for this reaction is 60 µmol·min–1. The table shows that the reaction reaches this maximum initial rate at an initial substrate concentration, [S]0, of 2.0 × 10–3 M, and does not increase at higher substrate concentration, so this must be Vmax. (b) At [S]0, = 2.0 × 10–3 M, essentially all of the enzyme must be tied up as the enzymesubstrate complex, E-S. Thus, the reaction is going as fast as it can go at this concentration of enzyme and is limited by the number of enzyme molecules present to form the complex. ACS Chemistry FROG 107 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 Increasing the substrate concentration cannot produce more of the complex, so the reaction has reached its maximum rate. (c) Essentially all the enzyme is tied up as the enzyme-substrate complex, E-S, at substrate concentrations of 2.0 × 10–3 M or higher, so there is approximately zero concentration of the free enzyme under these conditions. (d) We can use the alternative Michaelis-Menten equation (11.77) and rearrange it to get 1/K and hence K, by substituting known values from the table: V [S] V0 = 1 max 0 ( K )+ [S]0 1 K = Vmax [S]0 – V0 [S]0 = V0 (60 µmol ⋅ min –1)(1.5 × 10 –4 M) – (45 µmol ⋅ min–1 )(1.5 × 10–4 M) –1 45 µmol ⋅ min 1 –5 ∴ K = 2.0 × 104 M–1 K = 5.0 × 10 M; The definition of K, equation (11.70), shows that it should have units of M–1, which we have obtained here. Problem 11.72. Experiments on an enzyme-catalyzed reaction that followed Michaelis-Menten kinetics showed that K = 1.2 × 105 M–1 and that, with the same amount of enzyme, the initial rate of the reaction, 45 µmol·min–1 (106 µmol = 1 mol), was the same for substrate concentrations of 0.10 M and 0.010 M. (a) If K = 1.2 × 105 M–1, then 1/K = 8.3 × 10–6 M for this enzyme. Substrate concentrations, [S]0, of either 0.10 M or 0.010 M are much larger than 1/K, so the sum (1/K) + [S]0 ≈ [S]0, for both concentrations. Thus, for the Michaelis-Menten equation (11.73), we can write: ⎛ [E] [S] ⎞ ⎛ [E] [S] ⎞ V0 = k ⎜ 1 tot 0 ⎟ ≈ k ⎜ tot 0 ⎟ = k[E]tot ⎝ [S]0 ⎠ ⎝ ( K )+ [S]0 ⎠ The amount of enzyme is the same in both experiments, so the initial rate is the same for both the reactions and V0 = Vmax = 45 µmol·min–1 at these enzyme concentrations. (b) In part (a) we found that Vmax = 45 µmol·min–1 for the same enzyme concentration as used in this experiment, 2.0 × 10–5 M. Substitute in equation (11.77) to find V0: (45 µmol ⋅ min –1 )(2.0 × 10 –5 M) Vmax [S]0 V0 = 1 = = 32 µmol·min–1 –6 –5 ( K )+ [S]0 (8.3 × 10 M) + (2.0 × 10 M) Problem 11.73. Suppose that a mutant enzyme in an organism binds the substrate 10 times more tightly than the native (normal) enzyme, that is, Kmutant = 10Knative. (a) Consider the Michaelis-Menten equation in this form: 108 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways V [S] V0 = 1 max 0 ( K )+ [S]0 We know that for [S]0 >> 1/K, high substrate concentration, the initial rate becomes Vmax. If Kmutant is larger than Knative, the maximum rate will be reached more quickly (because 1/Kmutant < 1/Knative), but it will be the same maximum rate, if nothing else about the enzymatic mechanism has changed. The limiting rate for both enzymes is the same. (b) At a low substrate concentration that is not saturating for either enzyme, we approach the case that 1/K >> [S]0 and the initial velocity is: V0 = KVmax[S]0 When the reaction is catalyzed by the mutant enzyme with the ten-fold larger K, it will go ten times faster than if it had been catalyzed by the native enzyme. At low substrate concentrations, the reaction rate will differ by a factor of about ten favoring the mutant enzyme. (c) A plot of V0 vs. [S]0 is shown here for a case that Vmax = 100 nM·min–1, 1/Knative = 3000 µM, and 1/Kmutant = 300 µM: V0, nM min–1 100 mutant native 0 0 5000 [S]0, µM Problem 11.74. The enzyme urease catalyzes the hydrolysis of urea to ammonium and carbonate ions (or bicarbonate under acidic conditions), reaction equation (11.80): ⎯⎯→ 2NH4+(aq) + CO32–(aq) NH2CONH2(aq) + 2H2O ⎯urease Initial rate data as a function of substrate, NH2CONH2(aq), concentration are: [NH2CONH2(aq)]0, M 0.00065 0.00129 0.00327 0.00830 0.0167 0.0333 V0, M·sec–1 ACS Chemistry FROG 0.226 0.362 0.600 0.846 0.975 1.03 109 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 (a) Assuming that the reaction obeys Michaelis-Menten kinetics, we can estimate Vmax and K for the reaction from this plot: 1.2 1.0 V0, M s–1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0 0.01 0.02 0.03 0.04 [H2NCONH2]0, M The horizontal red line on the graph is an estimate for Vmax, about 1.1 M·s–1. Equation (11.79) indicates that 1/K is equal to the substrate concentration when V0 is half of Vmax. The vertical red line on the graph is shows about where V0 would be 0.55 M·s–1 and gives 1/K (equal the substrate concentration at this point) of about 0.0025 M = 2.5 × 10–3 M, so K = 4.0 × 102 M–1. (b) We can invert both sides of the Michaelis-Menten equation as follows: V [S] V0 = 1 max 0 , ( K )+ [S]0 ( ) ( ) ( ) 1 + [S] 1 ⎡ 1 ⎤⎛ 1 ⎞ 1 1 0 [S]0 K = K = + = ⎢ K ⎥⎜ ⎟ + ⎢ Vmax ⎥⎝ [S]0 ⎠ Vmax Vmax [S]0 Vmax [S]0 Vmax [S]0 V0 ⎦ ⎣ This double-reciprocal equation can be plotted (Lineweaver-Burk plot) with the data in this problem to give: 5 1/V0, s M–1 4 3 2 1/V0 = 2.30x10–3(1/[S] ) + 0.920 0 1 0 0 400 800 1200 1600 , M–1 1/[S]0 = 1/[H2NCONH2]0 The intercept of the line, 0.920 s·M–1, is 1/Vmax, so Vmax = 1.087 M·s–1. The slope of the line, 2.30 × 10–3 s, divided by the intercept gives 1/K = 2.5 × 10–3 M, so K = 4.0 × 102 M–1. 110 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways (c) The values for Vmax and 1/K from parts (a) and (b) are the same. Usually, more reliable values are obtained from the double-reciprocal plot, if the data cover a wide enough range of appropriate substrate concentrations (lower than the saturation limit). (d) For V0 = 0.99Vmax, we get: V [S] V0 = 0.99Vmax = 1 max 0 ( K )+ [S]0 Vmax cancels from both sides and rearrangement gives: 0.99 1 K + 0.99[S]0 = [S]0 [S]0 (for V0 = 0.99Vmax) = 0.99 0.01 1 K = 99(2.5 × 10–3 M) = 0.25 M Note that the [S]0 required to get V0 equal to X% of Vmax will always be X 1 K for an enzymatic reaction that follows the simple pathway described in this chapter. ( ) ( )( ) ( ) Problem 11.75. We know that 1 unit = 10 µmol·(15 min)–1 and that the enzyme has an activity of 2750 units·mg–1, so the amount of pyrophosphate our purified enzyme can hydrolyze is: amount of pyrophosphate = (2750 units·mg–1)[10 µmol·(15 min)–1·unit–1] amount of pyrophosphate = 1.83 × 103 µmol·mg–1·min–1 In one second, the amount is: ⎛ 1 min ⎞ = 30.5 µmol·mg–1·s– amount of pyrophosphate = (1.83 × 103 µmol·mg–1·min–1) ⎜ ⎟ ⎝ 60 s ⎠ 1 Problem 11.76. Enzymatic reactions are affected by many factors, including molecules that bind to the enzyme at the site(s) where their substrate(s) must bind to undergo reaction. These molecules are often called “inhibitors,” because their usual effect is to slow the enzymatic reaction. The initial rate data here are for an enzymatic reaction in the absence and presence of a constant concentration of an inhibitor. [S]0, M 1.0 × 10–4 1.5 × 10–4 2.0 × 10–4 5.0 × 10–4 7.5 × 10–4 V0, µmol·min–1 inhibitor absent V0, µmol·min–1 inhibitor present 28 36 43 63 74 18 24 30 51 63 (a) The series of enzymatic reactions, including reversible binding of an inhibitor, I, at the active site of the enzyme is: ACS Chemistry FROG 111 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 E + S ⇔ E-S rapid equilibrium, K E + I ⇔ E-I rapid equilibrium, KI E-S → E + P slow, k A pictorial representation of these reactions [modeled after equation (11.69)] is: The effect of the inhibitor is to tie up some of the enzyme, so there is less free enzyme available to react to form the enzyme-substrate complex. One way to interpret the decrease in reaction rate is to say that the system acts as though a reduced amount of enzyme is present when the inhibitor is added. This situation would lead to a lower value of Vmax for the reaction with inhibitor added. Another way to interpret the rate decrease is to think of the competition between the inhibitor and the substrate for the enzyme as decreasing the binding ability of the enzyme for the substrate (a smaller effective K), which would slow the reaction. A quantitative analysis of the results may help us see which interpretation is correct (or perhaps suggest another). (b) The V0 vs. [S]0 plots of the data look like this: 80 70 V0, µmol min–1 60 50 40 30 no inhibitor 20 inhibitor 10 0 0 0.0002 0.0004 [S]0, M 0.0006 0.0008 The plots are a bit difficult to interpret because they do not seem to be close to saturation by the substrate, so the Vmax for each curve is hard to estimate. One possibility is that both curves go to the same Vmax, with the inhibitor reaction requiring a higher substrate concentration to reach saturation. If we estimate Vmax = 90 mol·min–1, then one-half Vmax is shown by the horizontal line on the graph. The values for 1/K read from the curve are about 2.5 × 10–4 M and 4.0 × 10– 4 M, respectively, for the reactions without inhibitor and with inhibitor. This result supports the second interpretation suggested in part (a) where the presence of inhibitor results in a decrease in the effective K (larger 1/K) for the inhibited reaction. If the first interpretation is more appropriate, the Vmax for the two plots should be different, with that for the inhibited reaction 112 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways lower. It’s hard to tell from these data whether the Vmax is different for the two cases. However, if they are different and we estimate that Vmax = 90 mol·min–1 for the reaction without inhibitor (as we did for the previous analysis) and Vmax = 80 mol·min–1 for the reaction with inhibitor, then the values for 1/K read from the curve are about 2.5 × 10–4 M and 3.5 × 10–4 M, respectively, for the reactions without inhibitor and with inhibitor. The implication of this result is that both the Vmax and K values are affected by the presence of the inhibitor. Perhaps a double-reciprocal plot of the data will help to clarify the results. (c) The double-reciprocal plots of the data are: 0.06 1/V0 = 4.6x10-6(1/[S]0) + 0.0103 0.05 1/V0, min µmol–1 inhibitor 0.04 no inhibitor 0.03 0.02 0.01 1/V0 = 2.5x10-6(1/[S]0) + 0.0105 0 0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000 1/[s]0, M–1 Within the uncertainty of these data, we can conclude that the intercept is the same, 0.0104 min·mmol–1, for both plots. Thus, Vmax [= 1/(intercept) = 96 mmol·min–1] is the same in the absence or presence of inhibitor. This is consistent with the first analysis we made in part (b) and our estimate for Vmax was reasonable. The slopes divided by the intercepts give 1/K for each case and we get 2.4 × 10–4 M and 4.4 × 10–4 M, respectively, for the reactions without inhibitor and with inhibitor. These results are the same as and support the first analysis in part (b) and the second interpretation in part (a). The effective value of K is decreased in the presence of inhibitor, because the competition between the substrate and inhibitor for the enzyme active site effectively lowers the affinity of the enzyme for the substrate. At high enough substrate concentration, the competition is essentially always won by the substrate and the maximum rate is the same as in the absence of the inhibitor. Problem 11.77. The normal substrate for the enzyme aspartate transcarbamylase is aspartate. Succinate is an inhibitor (see Problem 11.76) of the normal reaction. The structures of the substrate and inhibitor are O H2 C O C O O NH3 C H H2 C O C O aspartate C C C H2 O succinate O Based on their structures, this inhibition makes sense. The carboxylate, –C(O)O–, groups at the ends of both the aspartate and succinate molecules (ions) and the similar molecular shapes are ACS Chemistry FROG 113 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 obvious similarities between the two structures that could cause them both to be able to bind to the active site of the enzyme. They could be bound in the active site by ionic interactions with appropriately placed positive groups, –NH3+, from amino acid side chains such as lysine or the positively charged form of the nitrogen-containing ring in the histidine side chain. Problem 11.78. The rate of almost all reactions, including enzyme-catalyzed reactions, increases with increasing temperature. For enzymatic reactions, however, the rate decreases rapidly beyond a certain temperature (which is dependent on the enzyme under study). Enzymes are protein molecules and we found in Chapter 1, Section 1.9, that proteins denature, that is, lose their active threedimensional structures when raised to too high a temperature, as when we boil or fry an egg. Thus, for every enzyme, there is probably a temperature above which it begins to denature and lose the structure responsible for its catalytic activity. There is a wide range of temperature stability among enzymes. Some are denatured at relatively low temperatures, whereas those in organisms that live at high temperatures, such as bacteria in hot thermal springs where the temperatures can be above 100 °C, are stable at these elevated temperatures. Problem 11.79. (a) In Problem 11.28, you found that the decomposition of ammonia on a hot tungsten wire goes at the same rate even as NH3 decomposes and its pressure (concentration) decreases. The reaction rate is independent of the amount of ammonia left unreacted (at least for the data we have). This decomposition reaction occurs on the surface of the tungsten metal, which has a limited area and, therefore, limited sites available for ammonia molecules to bind and react. At the pressures in the experiment for which we have data, it is possible that the ammonia concentration is high enough to keep all the active sites occupied (as products are formed and leave the surface another ammonia molecule immediately binds). If this is a saturation effect, then we should study the reaction at lower pressures to see if we find pressures where the decomposition does depend on the ammonia pressure. Also, if the reaction rate depends on the number of sites on the tungsten, increasing the surface area of the tungsten (longer or more wires, for example) should increase the rate. (b) Our results from Problem 11.28 show that the rate of reaction is constant, 1.46 × 10–2 kPa·s– 1 , over the range from 26 kPa (the initial pressure) to at least 11.4 kPa (the lowest NH3 pressure in the experiment). Assume a very simple Michaelis-Menten-type pathway for the ammonia reaction: rapid equilibrium, K NH3(g) + metal surface sites ⇔ NH3(bound to metal surface) NH3(bound to metal surface) → products slow, k The analysis of this pathway is identical to that for the Michaelis-Menten enzyme pathway and leads to linear dependence of initial reaction rates on ammonia pressure (concentration) at low pressure and saturation and a maximum rate at high pressure. A sketch of an initial rate, V0, vs. initial pressure of ammonia, P(NH3), is shown on this graph for the system whose results are given in Problem 11.28, on the assumption that the reaction will not be saturated at ammonia pressures below about 10 kPa: 114 ACS Chemistry FROG Reaction Pathways 15 Chapter 11 12 100 80 9 V0, kPa s–1 60 6 40 0 3 20 0 00 2000 5 4000 6000 10 15 PNH3, kPa 8000 20 10000 25 Problem 11.80. Rewrite the butyl phosphate hydrolysis reaction to show where the labeled oxygen atoms, O*, are in the reactants and products: C4H9OP(O)(OH)2 + H2O* → C4H9OH + (HO*)3PO In order to end up bonded to the phosphorus atom in the product, it is likely that the reaction pathway involves the initial formation of a bond between the oxygen atom in water and the phosphorus atom in the ester. This is the reaction of a nucleophile, one of the nonbonding electron pairs on the negative end of the polar water molecule, with an electrophile, the relatively positively polarized phosphorus atom bonded to four electronegative oxygen atoms. Electron and atomic rearrangements after the initial bond formation lead to the final products. A possible pathway is shown here (with R– representing the C4H9– group): O RO P OH OH O O OH RO P OH H O H OH2 RO H HO P OH OH Problem 11.81. Reaction pathway (i) in Problem 11.37 proposes that dinitrogen pentoxide, O2NONO2, reacts by decomposing in a rapid reversible reaction to NO3 and NO2, which then can undergo this rate limiting reaction: NO3 + NO2 → NO2 + O2 + NO (a) Lewis structures and formal charges (excluding zero) for the dinitrogen pentoxide, nitrogen trioxide, and nitrogen dioxide molecules are: O dinitrogen pentoxide O O O O N O N N O N O O 4 structures ACS Chemistry FROG O 4 structures 115 Reaction Pathways Chapter 11 O nitrogen trioxide N O O 6 structures O O N nitrogen dioxide N O O 2 structures 2 structures (b) We see that all three molecules have one or more Lewis structures for which several equivalent forms can be written (with the electrons on different atoms), so all are stabilized by electron delocalization. We also observe that the positive formal charges on the structures for dinitrogen pentoxide accumulate in the region of the bond that will be broken in the first step of the proposed mechanism. The ends of the molecule repel one another, which could account for its dissociation to yield molecules that are also stabilized and do not have such repulsions. For both dinitrogen pentoxide and nitrogen dioxide, we expect the structures on the left to contribute more to the electron distribution in the molecule, because they have the fewer formal charges. Also, in the case of dinitrogen pentoxide, the second structure places a positive formal charge on oxygen, an atom with a high electronegativity, which is unfavorable. (c) The reaction between nitrogen trioxide and nitrogen dioxide has to produce an oxygen molecule, in order to satisfy the stoichiometry of the overall reaction. It seems reasonable to suppose that a bond between two oxygen atoms should exist in the activated complex leading from reactants to products. A structure that fits the bill is: O O N N O O O 2 structures This structure is somewhat stabilized by electron delocalization, but the reactants that come together to form it are even more stabilized. We might anticipate a relatively high activation energy barrier, since this activated complex is less stabilized by electron delocalization than the reactants. If the activation energy is high, the slow reaction is explained. [Other Lewis structures are possible for this species, but all of them place positive formal charges on an oxygen atom (or two oxygen atoms) and an adjacent atom, which is highly unfavorable.] Problem 11.82. In Problem 11.35, a pathway was proposed for the net reaction: (CH3)3CCl + OH– → (CH3)3COH + Cl–. This pathway is consistent with the rate law you derived, based on the information in Problems 11.15 and 11.25. Experiments with (CH3)3CBr and (CH3)3CI show that they undergo this same reaction with the same rate law, but at different rates. (a) The rate-limiting step for the proposed reaction pathway is the dissociation of the starting compound to yield ions: (CH3)3CX → (CH3)3C+ + X– 116 ACS Chemistry FROG Chapter 11 Reaction Pathways In this reaction, X represents Cl, Br, or I. The rate of this reaction is likely to depend on the strength of the C–X bond in the starting compounds. It is reasonable to hypothesize that the stronger the bond the higher the activation energy for the reaction and the slower the reaction (b) Table 7.3 in Chapter 6, Section 7.7, gives the C–X bond enthalpies for X = Cl, Br, and I as 338, 276 and 238 kJ·mol–1, respectively. By our reasoning in part (a), we would expect the chloro compound to react most slowly and the iodo compound to react most rapidly. (c) We know that the rates of reactions with higher activation energies are more affected by changes in the temperature at which the reactions are carried out. From our reasoning in parts (a) and (b), we would expect the reaction rate for the chloro compound to be most affected by temperature change. (d) Assuming that these are elementary reactions, the initial rates of formation of the alkene (by transfer of a proton to a solvent molecule) and alcohol (by reaction with hydroxide ion in the solvent) from the cation intermediate, (CH3)3C+, are: ∆ [alkene] rate (alkene) = = ke[(CH3)3C+][solvent] ∆t ∆ [alcohol] = ka[(CH3)3C+][OH–] rate (alcohol) = ∆t The ratio of these rates of formation after the same amount of time, ∆t, will be the ratio of product yields: k e[solvent] ∆ [alkene] ∆[alcohol] = ka [OH – ] If the initial solution conditions are the same for the reaction of each of the halo compounds, the ratio on the right-hand side of this equation is the same in each reaction and, hence, the ratio of alkene to alcohol will be the same, no matter which halo compound is the reactant. Thus, the mechanism is consistent with the observation that the alkene-to-alcohol ratio is the same for all three reactants. ACS Chemistry FROG 117