1. activation energy 2. catalyst 3. chemical equilibrium 4. collision theory 5. equilibrium constant...

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1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s Princi 9. Nonspontaneous reacti 10. Rate 11. Rate Law 12. Reversible Reaction 13. Spontaneous Reaction Define vocab words on Quizlet Create a study set: Chapter 19 Be sure you have downloaded the app on your phone/ipad.

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Page 1: 1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s

1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s Principle9. Nonspontaneous reaction 10. Rate 11. Rate Law 12. Reversible Reaction 13. Spontaneous Reaction

• Define vocab words on Quizlet

• Create a study set: Chapter 19

• Be sure you have downloaded the app on your phone/ipad.

Page 2: 1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s

Reaction Rates and EquilibriumRates of Reaction

Page 3: 1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s

Think about it…

• What are some ways the rate of a reaction can be increased?

• What is a Rate??• A rate tells you how much something changes in a

specified amount of time. • Chemical Kinetics is the study of how fast a

chemical reaction occurs• Examples could be your speed or growth

Page 4: 1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s

Reaction Rates

• Some reactions occur very quickly, almost instantaneously• i.e. striking a match

• Others can occur very, very slowly• i.e. coal forming from dead organic matter

• Rates of reaction vary greatly and depend on several characteristics.

Page 5: 1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s

Collision Theory

• Rates of chemical reactions are related to the properties of atoms, ions, and molecules

• The collision theory states that when these particles react they must come into contact and collide with enough kinetic energy.

• If they do not have enough K.E., they bounce off and no rxn occurs (unsuccessful collision)

Page 6: 1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s

Collision Theory

• Its not enough that they collide, they must have enough force (kinetic energy) to “stick” and react

Page 7: 1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s

How Much Kinetic Energy??

• The amount of force or Kinetic Energy required is known as the Activation Energy, denoted (Ea).

• This is the minimum amount of energy to have in order for a reaction to take place.• Without it, the particles bounce off and nothing

happens.

• This is essentially just a barrier the particles must cross in order to form products.

Page 8: 1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s

Activation Energy, (Ea)

• As stated, this is the minimum amount of energy needed during a collision for a rxn to occur.

Page 9: 1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s

Activation Energy, (Ea)

(∆G)

Page 11: 1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s

Factors Affecting Reaction Rates

• You can modify the rate of almost any reaction by changing the conditions• Such conditions can be Temperature, Concentration,

and Particle Size. • You could also add a catalyst… what is a catalyst??

• Think about Collision Theory.• The question you should ask is: What can I do

to INCREASE THE NUMBER OF COLLISIONS??

Page 12: 1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s

Temperature

• Usually, raising the temperature will speed up a reaction.

• At higher temperatures, the motion of the particles is __________________.

• With this increase in motion also comes an increase of average _______________, thereby giving the particles enough energy to overcome the Activation Energy (Ea)

Page 13: 1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s

Concentration

• The number of reacting particles in a given volume also plays a huge role in the speed.

• By sticking in more particles you increase the concentration, which then increases the number of collisions, which thennnn increases the reaction rate (speed)

Page 14: 1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s

Particle Size

• The smaller the sample, the more surface area there is for contact

• The more surface area, the more collisions

• One way to increase the surface area is to dissolve them in solution or crush them up• Crushing or grinding reactants up will greatly

increase the speed of reaction.

Page 15: 1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s

Catalysts

• What is a catalyst??

• The catalyst itself is NOT used up or altered in any way in a chemical reaction

Page 16: 1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s

Catalyzed Reaction

2H2(g) + O2(g) 2H2O(l)Pt

Because catalysts are not consumed or changed in a reaction, they are not written as reactants OR products.

Page 17: 1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s

Biological Catalysts

• Catalysts in our bodies are VERY important.

• Many necessary reactions do not occur at body temperature (37⁰C) and we cannot simply jack up the temp… Why not??

• In order to help speed up these needed reactions, we add biological catalysts, or enzymes.

Page 18: 1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s

Enzymes• Without enzymes, digestion of proteins would take

years!!!

• We need to obviously speed this reaction up!

• An inhibitor is a substance that interferes with a catalysts’ job.

• Reactions will slow or even stop when an inhibitor is introduced. They stop the catalyst from doing its job (which is to speed it all up!)

Page 19: 1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s

Questions:• What is chemical kinetics? What is collision theory? • What is activation energy and how does it relate to the

number of collisions that take place in a chemical reaction?• What is a catalyst?• If an inhibitor is added to a chemical reaction, what

happens to the rate? • Does every collision between reacting particles lead to

products? Explain. • When the gas to a stove is turned on, the gas does not

burn unless lit by a flame. Once lit, however, the gas burns until turned off. Explain these observations in terms of the effect of temperature on reaction rate.

Page 20: 1. Activation Energy 2. Catalyst 3. Chemical Equilibrium 4. Collision Theory 5. Equilibrium Constant 6. Inhibitor 7. Law of Disorder 8. Le Chatelier’s

___H2 + ____O

2 _____ H

2O

___Na + ___H(OH) ___Na(OH) + ___H2

___HgO ___Hg + ___O2

___Al + ___Fe2O3 ___ Al2O3 + ___ Fe

___C2H5OH + ___O2 ___H2O + ___CO2

___H2 + ___N2 ___NH3

___NH4NO2 ___N2 + ___H2O

___BaCl2 + ___Na2(SO4) ___NaCl + ___Ba(SO4)