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Rate equation

In chemistry, the rate equation (also known as the rate law or empirical differential rate equation) is an empirical differential mathematical expression for the reaction rate of a given reaction in terms of concentrations of chemical species and constant parameters (normally rate coefficients and partial orders of reaction) only.[1] For many reactions, the initial rate is given by a power law such as

where and are the molar concentrations of the species and usually in moles per liter (molarity, ). The exponents and are the partial orders of reaction for and and the overall reaction order is the sum of the exponents. These are often positive integers, but they may also be zero, fractional, or negative. The order of reaction is a number which quantifies the degree to which the rate of a chemical reaction depends on concentrations of the reactants.[2] In other words, the order of reaction is the exponent to which the concentration of a particular reactant is raised.[2] The constant is the reaction rate constant or rate coefficient and at very few places velocity constant or specific rate of reaction. Its value may depend on conditions such as temperature, ionic strength, surface area of an adsorbent, or light irradiation. If the reaction goes to completion, the rate equation for the reaction rate applies throughout the course of the reaction.

Elementary (single-step) reactions and reaction steps have reaction orders equal to the stoichiometric coefficients for each reactant. The overall reaction order, i.e. the sum of stoichiometric coefficients of reactants, is always equal to the molecularity of the elementary reaction. However, complex (multi-step) reactions may or may not have reaction orders equal to their stoichiometric coefficients. This implies that the order and the rate equation of a given reaction cannot be reliably deduced from the stoichiometry and must be determined experimentally, since an unknown reaction mechanism could be either elementary or complex. When the experimental rate equation has been determined, it is often of use for deduction of the reaction mechanism.

The rate equation of a reaction with an assumed multi-step mechanism can often be derived theoretically using quasi-steady state assumptions from the underlying elementary reactions, and compared with the experimental rate equation as a test of the assumed mechanism. The equation may involve a fractional order, and may depend on the concentration of an intermediate species.

A reaction can also have an undefined reaction order with respect to a reactant if the rate is not simply proportional to some power of the concentration of that reactant; for example, one cannot talk about reaction order in the rate equation for a bimolecular reaction between adsorbed molecules:

Definition edit

Consider a typical chemical reaction in which two reactants A and B combine to form a product C:

 

This can also be written

 

The prefactors −1, −2 and 3 (with negative signs for reactants because they are consumed) are known as stoichiometric coefficients. One molecule of A combines with two of B to form 3 of C, so if we use the symbol [X] for the number of moles of chemical X,[3]

 

If the reaction takes place in a closed system at constant temperature and volume, without a build-up of reaction intermediates, the reaction rate   is defined as

 

where νi is the stoichiometric coefficient for chemical Xi, with a negative sign for a reactant.[4]

The initial reaction rate   has some functional dependence on the concentrations of the reactants,

 

and this dependence is known as the rate equation or rate law.[5] This law generally cannot be deduced from the chemical equation and must be determined by experiment.[6]

Power laws edit

A common form for the rate equation is a power law:[6]

 

The constant   is called the rate constant. The exponents, which can be fractional,[6] are called partial orders of reaction and their sum is the overall order of reaction.[7]

In a dilute solution, an elementary reaction (one having a single step with a single transition state) is empirically found to obey the law of mass action. This predicts that the rate depends only on the concentrations of the reactants, raised to the powers of their stoichiometric coefficients.[8]

Determination of reaction order edit

Method of initial rates edit

The natural logarithm of the power-law rate equation is

 

This can be used to estimate the order of reaction of each reactant. For example, the initial rate can be measured in a series of experiments at different initial concentrations of reactant   with all other concentrations   kept constant, so that

 

The slope of a graph of   as a function of   then corresponds to the order   with respect to reactant  .[9][10]

However, this method is not always reliable because

  1. measurement of the initial rate requires accurate determination of small changes in concentration in short times (compared to the reaction half-life) and is sensitive to errors, and
  2. the rate equation will not be completely determined if the rate also depends on substances not present at the beginning of the reaction, such as intermediates or products.

Integral method edit

The tentative rate equation determined by the method of initial rates is therefore normally verified by comparing the concentrations measured over a longer time (several half-lives) with the integrated form of the rate equation; this assumes that the reaction goes to completion.

For example, the integrated rate law for a first-order reaction is

 

where   is the concentration at time   and   is the initial concentration at zero time. The first-order rate law is confirmed if   is in fact a linear function of time. In this case the rate constant   is equal to the slope with sign reversed.[11][12]

Method of flooding edit

The partial order with respect to a given reactant can be evaluated by the method of flooding (or of isolation) of Ostwald. In this method, the concentration of one reactant is measured with all other reactants in large excess so that their concentration remains essentially constant. For a reaction a·A + b·B → c·C with rate law   the partial order   with respect to   is determined using a large excess of  . In this case

  with  

and   may be determined by the integral method. The order   with respect to   under the same conditions (with   in excess) is determined by a series of similar experiments with a range of initial concentration   so that the variation of   can be measured.[13]

Zero order edit

For zero-order reactions, the reaction rate is independent of the concentration of a reactant, so that changing its concentration has no effect on the rate of the reaction. Thus, the concentration changes linearly with time. This may occur when there is a bottleneck which limits the number of reactant molecules that can react at the same time, for example if the reaction requires contact with an enzyme or a catalytic surface.[14]

Many enzyme-catalyzed reactions are zero order, provided that the reactant concentration is much greater than the enzyme concentration which controls the rate, so that the enzyme is saturated. For example, the biological oxidation of ethanol to acetaldehyde by the enzyme liver alcohol dehydrogenase (LADH) is zero order in ethanol.[15]

Similarly reactions with heterogeneous catalysis can be zero order if the catalytic surface is saturated. For example, the decomposition of phosphine (PH3) on a hot tungsten surface at high pressure is zero order in phosphine, which decomposes at a constant rate.[14]

In homogeneous catalysis zero order behavior can come about from reversible inhibition. For example, ring-opening metathesis polymerization using third-generation Grubbs catalyst exhibits zero order behavior in catalyst due to the reversible inhibition that occurs between pyridine and the ruthenium center.[16]

First order edit

A first order reaction depends on the concentration of only one reactant (a unimolecular reaction). Other reactants can be present, but their concentration has no effect on the rate. The rate law for a first order reaction is

 

Although not affecting the above math, the majority of first order reactions proceed via intermolecular collisions. Such collisions, which contribute the energy to the reactant, are necessarily second order. The rate of these collisions is, however, masked by the fact that the rate determining step remains the unimolecular breakdown of the energized reactant.

The half-life is independent of the starting concentration and is given by  . The mean lifetime is τ = 1/k.[17]

Examples of such reactions are:

  •   [18][19]
  •  
  •   [20]

In organic chemistry, the class of SN1 (nucleophilic substitution unimolecular) reactions consists of first-order reactions. For example, in the reaction of aryldiazonium ions with nucleophiles in aqueous solution, ArN+2 + X → ArX + N2, the rate equation is   where Ar indicates an aryl group.[21]

Second order edit

A reaction is said to be second order when the overall order is two. The rate of a second-order reaction may be proportional to one concentration squared,   or (more commonly) to the product of two concentrations,   As an example of the first type, the reaction NO2 + CO → NO + CO2 is second-order in the reactant NO2 and zero order in the reactant CO. The observed rate is given by   and is independent of the concentration of CO.[22]

For the rate proportional to a single concentration squared, the time dependence of the concentration is given by

 

The time dependence for a rate proportional to two unequal concentrations is

 

if the concentrations are equal, they satisfy the previous equation.

The second type includes nucleophilic addition-elimination reactions, such as the alkaline hydrolysis of ethyl acetate:[21]

 

This reaction is first-order in each reactant and second-order overall:

 

If the same hydrolysis reaction is catalyzed by imidazole, the rate equation becomes[21]

 

The rate is first-order in one reactant (ethyl acetate), and also first-order in imidazole, which as a catalyst does not appear in the overall chemical equation.

Another well-known class of second-order reactions are the SN2 (bimolecular nucleophilic substitution) reactions, such as the reaction of n-butyl bromide with sodium iodide in acetone:

 

This same compound can be made to undergo a bimolecular (E2) elimination reaction, another common type of second-order reaction, if the sodium iodide and acetone are replaced with sodium tert-butoxide as the salt and tert-butanol as the solvent:

 

Pseudo-first order edit

If the concentration of a reactant remains constant (because it is a catalyst, or because it is in great excess with respect to the other reactants), its concentration can be included in the rate constant, leading to a pseudo–first-order (or occasionally pseudo–second-order) rate equation. For a typical second-order reaction with rate equation   if the concentration of reactant B is constant then   where the pseudo–first-order rate constant   The second-order rate equation has been reduced to a pseudo–first-order rate equation, which makes the treatment to obtain an integrated rate equation much easier.

One way to obtain a pseudo-first order reaction is to use a large excess of one reactant (say, [B]≫[A]) so that, as the reaction progresses, only a small fraction of the reactant in excess (B) is consumed, and its concentration can be considered to stay constant. For example, the hydrolysis of esters by dilute mineral acids follows pseudo-first order kinetics, where the concentration of water is constant because it is present in large excess:

 

The hydrolysis of sucrose (C12H22O11) in acid solution is often cited as a first-order reaction with rate   The true rate equation is third-order,   however, the concentrations of both the catalyst H+ and the solvent H2O are normally constant, so that the reaction is pseudo–first-order.[23]

Summary for reaction orders 0, 1, 2, and n edit

Elementary reaction steps with order 3 (called ternary reactions) are rare and unlikely to occur. However, overall reactions composed of several elementary steps can, of course, be of any (including non-integer) order.

Zero order First order Second order nth order (g = 1-n)
Rate Law      [24]  
Integrated Rate Law      [24]  

[Except first order]

Units of Rate Constant (k)        
Linear Plot to determine k [A] vs. t   vs. t   vs. t   vs. t

[Except first order]

Half-life      [24]  

[Limit is necessary for first order]

Here   stands for concentration in molarity (mol · L−1),   for time, and   for the reaction rate constant. The half-life of a first-order reaction is often expressed as t1/2 = 0.693/k (as ln(2)≈0.693).

Fractional order edit

In fractional order reactions, the order is a non-integer, which often indicates a chemical chain reaction or other complex reaction mechanism. For example, the pyrolysis of acetaldehyde (CH3CHO) into methane and carbon monoxide proceeds with an order of 1.5 with respect to acetaldehyde:  [25] The decomposition of phosgene (COCl2) to carbon monoxide and chlorine has order 1 with respect to phosgene itself and order 0.5 with respect to chlorine:  [26]

The order of a chain reaction can be rationalized using the steady state approximation for the concentration of reactive intermediates such as free radicals. For the pyrolysis of acetaldehyde, the Rice-Herzfeld mechanism is

Initiation
 
Propagation
 
 
Termination
 

where • denotes a free radical.[25][27] To simplify the theory, the reactions of the *CHO to form a second *CH3 are ignored.

In the steady state, the rates of formation and destruction of methyl radicals are equal, so that

 

so that the concentration of methyl radical satisfies

 

The reaction rate equals the rate of the propagation steps which form the main reaction products CH4 and CO:

 

in agreement with the experimental order of 3/2.[25][27]

Complex laws edit

Mixed order edit

More complex rate laws have been described as being mixed order if they approximate to the laws for more than one order at different concentrations of the chemical species involved. For example, a rate law of the form   represents concurrent first order and second order reactions (or more often concurrent pseudo-first order and second order) reactions, and can be described as mixed first and second order.[28] For sufficiently large values of [A] such a reaction will approximate second order kinetics, but for smaller [A] the kinetics will approximate first order (or pseudo-first order). As the reaction progresses, the reaction can change from second order to first order as reactant is consumed.

Another type of mixed-order rate law has a denominator of two or more terms, often because the identity of the rate-determining step depends on the values of the concentrations. An example is the oxidation of an alcohol to a ketone by hexacyanoferrate (III) ion [Fe(CN)63−] with ruthenate (VI) ion (RuO42−) as catalyst.[29] For this reaction, the rate of disappearance of hexacyanoferrate (III) is  

This is zero-order with respect to hexacyanoferrate (III) at the onset of the reaction (when its concentration is high and the ruthenium catalyst is quickly regenerated), but changes to first-order when its concentration decreases and the regeneration of catalyst becomes rate-determining.

Notable mechanisms with mixed-order rate laws with two-term denominators include:

  • Michaelis-Menten kinetics for enzyme-catalysis: first-order in substrate (second-order overall) at low substrate concentrations, zero order in substrate (first-order overall) at higher substrate concentrations; and
  • the Lindemann mechanism for unimolecular reactions: second-order at low pressures, first-order at high pressures.

Negative order edit

A reaction rate can have a negative partial order with respect to a substance. For example, the conversion of ozone (O3) to oxygen follows the rate equation   in an excess of oxygen. This corresponds to second order in ozone and order (−1) with respect to oxygen.[30]

When a partial order is negative, the overall order is usually considered as undefined. In the above example, for instance, the reaction is not described as first order even though the sum of the partial orders is  , because the rate equation is more complex than that of a simple first-order reaction.

Opposed reactions edit

A pair of forward and reverse reactions may occur simultaneously with comparable speeds. For example, A and B react into products P and Q and vice versa (a, b, p, and q are the stoichiometric coefficients):

 

The reaction rate expression for the above reactions (assuming each one is elementary) can be written as:

 

where: k1 is the rate coefficient for the reaction that consumes A and B; k−1 is the rate coefficient for the backwards reaction, which consumes P and Q and produces A and B.

The constants k1 and k−1 are related to the equilibrium coefficient for the reaction (K) by the following relationship (set v=0 in balance):

 
 
 
Concentration of A (A0 = 0.25 mol/L) and B versus time reaching equilibrium k1 = 2 min−1 and k−1 = 1 min−1

Simple example edit

In a simple equilibrium between two species:

 

where the reaction starts with an initial concentration of reactant A,  , and an initial concentration of 0 for product P at time t=0.

Then the equilibrium constant K is expressed as:

 

where   and   are the concentrations of A and P at equilibrium, respectively.

The concentration of A at time t,  , is related to the concentration of P at time t,  , by the equilibrium reaction equation:

 

The term   is not present because, in this simple example, the initial concentration of P is 0.

This applies even when time t is at infinity; i.e., equilibrium has been reached:

 

then it follows, by the definition of K, that

 

and, therefore,

 

These equations allow us to uncouple the system of differential equations, and allow us to solve for the concentration of A alone.

The reaction equation was given previously as:

 

For   this is simply

 

The derivative is negative because this is the rate of the reaction going from A to P, and therefore the concentration of A is decreasing. To simplify notation, let x be  , the concentration of A at time t. Let   be the concentration of A at equilibrium. Then:

 

Since:

 

the reaction rate becomes:

 

which results in:

 .

A plot of the negative natural logarithm of the concentration of A in time minus the concentration at equilibrium versus time t gives a straight line with slope k1 + k−1. By measurement of [A]e and [P]e the values of K and the two reaction rate constants will be known.[31]

Generalization of simple example edit

If the concentration at the time t = 0 is different from above, the simplifications above are invalid, and a system of differential equations must be solved. However, this system can also be solved exactly to yield the following generalized expressions:

 
 

When the equilibrium constant is close to unity and the reaction rates very fast for instance in conformational analysis of molecules, other methods are required for the determination of rate constants for instance by complete lineshape analysis in NMR spectroscopy.

Consecutive reactions edit

If the rate constants for the following reaction are   and  ;  , then the rate equation is:

For reactant A:  
For reactant B:  
For product C:  

With the individual concentrations scaled by the total population of reactants to become probabilities, linear systems of differential equations such as these can be formulated as a master equation. The differential equations can be solved analytically and the integrated rate equations are

 
 
 

The steady state approximation leads to very similar results in an easier way.

Parallel or competitive reactions edit

 
Time course of two first order, competitive reactions with differing rate constants.

When a substance reacts simultaneously to give two different products, a parallel or competitive reaction is said to take place.

Two first order reactions edit

  and  , with constants   and   and rate equations  ;   and  

The integrated rate equations are then  ;   and  .

One important relationship in this case is  

One first order and one second order reaction edit

This can be the case when studying a bimolecular reaction and a simultaneous hydrolysis (which can be treated as pseudo order one) takes place: the hydrolysis complicates the study of the reaction kinetics, because some reactant is being "spent" in a parallel reaction. For example, A reacts with R to give our product C, but meanwhile the hydrolysis reaction takes away an amount of A to give B, a byproduct:   and  . The rate equations are:   and  , where   is the pseudo first order constant.[32]

The integrated rate equation for the main product [C] is  , which is equivalent to  . Concentration of B is related to that of C through  

The integrated equations were analytically obtained but during the process it was assumed that  . Therefore, previous equation for [C] can only be used for low concentrations of [C] compared to [A]0

Stoichiometric reaction networks edit

The most general description of a chemical reaction network considers a number   of distinct chemical species reacting via   reactions.[33][34] The chemical equation of the  -th reaction can then be written in the generic form

 

which is often written in the equivalent form

 

Here

  •   is the reaction index running from 1 to  ,
  •   denotes the  -th chemical species,
  •   is the rate constant of the  -th reaction and
  •   and   are the stoichiometric coefficients of reactants and products, respectively.

The rate of such a reaction can be inferred by the law of mass action

 

which denotes the flux of molecules per unit time and unit volume. Here   is the vector of concentrations. This definition includes the elementary reactions:

zero order reactions
for which   for all  ,
first order reactions
for which   for a single  ,
second order reactions
for which   for exactly two  ; that is, a bimolecular reaction, or   for a single  ; that is, a dimerization reaction.

Each of these is discussed in detail below. One can define the stoichiometric matrix

 

denoting the net extent of molecules of   in reaction  . The reaction rate equations can then be written in the general form

 

This is the product of the stoichiometric matrix and the vector of reaction rate functions. Particular simple solutions exist in equilibrium,  , for systems composed of merely reversible reactions. In this case, the rate of the forward and backward reactions are equal, a principle called detailed balance. Detailed balance is a property of the stoichiometric matrix   alone and does not depend on the particular form of the rate functions  . All other cases where detailed balance is violated are commonly studied by flux balance analysis, which has been developed to understand metabolic pathways.[35][36]

General dynamics of unimolecular conversion edit

For a general unimolecular reaction involving interconversion of   different species, whose concentrations at time   are denoted by   through  , an analytic form for the time-evolution of the species can be found. Let the rate constant of conversion from species   to species   be denoted as  , and construct a rate-constant matrix   whose entries are the  .

Also, let   be the vector of concentrations as a function of time.

Let   be the vector of ones.

Let   be the   identity matrix.

Let   be the function that takes a vector and constructs a diagonal matrix whose on-diagonal entries are those of the vector.

Let   be the inverse Laplace transform from   to  .

Then the time-evolved state   is given by

 

thus providing the relation between the initial conditions of the system and its state at time  .

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Gold, Victor, ed. (2019). The IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology: The Gold Book (4 ed.). Research Triangle Park, NC: International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC). doi:10.1351/goldbook.
  2. ^ a b "14.3: Effect of Concentration on Reaction Rates: The Rate Law". Chemistry LibreTexts. 2015-01-18. Retrieved 2023-04-10.
  3. ^ Atkins & de Paula 2006, p. 794
  4. ^ IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book") (1997). Online corrected version: (2006–) "Rate of reaction". doi:10.1351/goldbook.R05156
  5. ^ Atkins & de Paula 2006, p. 795
  6. ^ a b c Atkins & de Paula 2006, p. 796
  7. ^ Connors 1990, p. 13
  8. ^ Connors 1990, p. 12
  9. ^ Atkins & de Paula 2006, pp. 797–8
  10. ^ Espenson 1987, pp. 5–8
  11. ^ Atkins & de Paula 2006, pp. 798–800
  12. ^ Espenson 1987, pp. 15–18
  13. ^ Espenson 1987, pp. 30–31
  14. ^ a b Atkins & de Paula 2006, p. 796
  15. ^ Tinoco & Wang 1995, p. 331
  16. ^ Walsh, Dylan J.; Lau, Sii Hong; Hyatt, Michael G.; Guironnet, Damien (2017-09-25). "Kinetic Study of Living Ring-Opening Metathesis Polymerization with Third-Generation Grubbs Catalysts". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 139 (39): 13644–13647. doi:10.1021/jacs.7b08010. ISSN 0002-7863. PMID 28944665.
  17. ^ Espenson, James H. (1981). Chemical Kinetics and Reaction Mechanisms. McGraw-Hill. p. 14. ISBN 0-07-019667-2.
  18. ^ Atkins & de Paula 2006, pp. 813–4
  19. ^ Keith J. Laidler, Chemical Kinetics (3rd ed., Harper & Row 1987), p.303-5 ISBN 0-06-043862-2
  20. ^ R.H. Petrucci, W.S. Harwood and F.G. Herring, General Chemistry (8th ed., Prentice-Hall 2002) p.588 ISBN 0-13-014329-4
  21. ^ a b c Connors 1990
  22. ^ Whitten K. W., Galley K. D. and Davis R. E. General Chemistry (4th edition, Saunders 1992), pp. 638–9 ISBN 0-03-072373-6
  23. ^ Tinoco & Wang 1995, pp. 328–9
  24. ^ a b c . See also: Capellos, Christos; Bielski, Benon H. (1972). Kinetic systems: mathematical description of chemical kinetics in solution. New York: Wiley-Interscience. ISBN 978-0471134503. OCLC 247275.
  25. ^ a b c Atkins & de Paula 2006, p. 830
  26. ^ Laidler 1987, p. 301
  27. ^ a b Laidler 1987, pp. 310–311
  28. ^ Espenson 1987, pp. 34, 60
  29. ^ Mucientes, Antonio E.; de la Peña, María A. (November 2006). "Ruthenium(VI)-Catalyzed Oxidation of Alcohols by Hexacyanoferrate(III): An Example of Mixed Order". Journal of Chemical Education. 83 (11): 1643. doi:10.1021/ed083p1643. ISSN 0021-9584.
  30. ^ Laidler 1987, p. 305
  31. ^ Rushton, Gregory T.; Burns, William G.; Lavin, Judi M.; Chong, Yong S.; Pellechia, Perry; Shimizu, Ken D. (September 2007). "Determination of the Rotational Barrier for Kinetically Stable Conformational Isomers via NMR and 2D TLC". Journal of Chemical Education. 84 (9): 1499. doi:10.1021/ed084p1499. ISSN 0021-9584.
  32. ^ Manso, José A.; Pérez-Prior, M. Teresa; García-Santos, M. del Pilar; Calle, Emilio; Casado, Julio (2005). "A Kinetic Approach to the Alkylating Potential of Carcinogenic Lactones". Chemical Research in Toxicology. 18 (7): 1161–1166. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.632.3473. doi:10.1021/tx050031d. PMID 16022509.
  33. ^ Heinrich, Reinhart; Schuster, Stefan (2012). The Regulation of Cellular Systems. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 9781461311614.
  34. ^ Chen, Luonan; Wang, Ruiqi; Li, Chunguang; Aihara, Kazuyuki (2010). Modeling Biomolecular Networks in Cells. doi:10.1007/978-1-84996-214-8. ISBN 978-1-84996-213-1.
  35. ^ Szallasi, Z., and Stelling, J. and Periwal, V. (2006) System modeling in cell biology: from concepts to nuts and bolts. MIT Press Cambridge.
  36. ^ Iglesias, Pablo A.; Ingalls, Brian P. (2010). Control theory and systems biology. MIT Press. ISBN 9780262013345.

Books cited edit

External links edit

  • Chemical kinetics, reaction rate, and order (needs flash player)
  • (lecture with audio).
  • Rates of Reaction

rate, equation, chemistry, rate, equation, also, known, rate, empirical, differential, rate, equation, empirical, differential, mathematical, expression, reaction, rate, given, reaction, terms, concentrations, chemical, species, constant, parameters, normally,. In chemistry the rate equation also known as the rate law or empirical differential rate equation is an empirical differential mathematical expression for the reaction rate of a given reaction in terms of concentrations of chemical species and constant parameters normally rate coefficients and partial orders of reaction only 1 For many reactions the initial rate is given by a power law such as v 0 k A x B y displaystyle v 0 k mathrm A x mathrm B y where A displaystyle mathrm A and B displaystyle mathrm B are the molar concentrations of the species A displaystyle mathrm A and B displaystyle mathrm B usually in moles per liter molarity M displaystyle M The exponents x displaystyle x and y displaystyle y are the partial orders of reaction for A displaystyle mathrm A and B displaystyle mathrm B and the overall reaction order is the sum of the exponents These are often positive integers but they may also be zero fractional or negative The order of reaction is a number which quantifies the degree to which the rate of a chemical reaction depends on concentrations of the reactants 2 In other words the order of reaction is the exponent to which the concentration of a particular reactant is raised 2 The constant k displaystyle k is the reaction rate constant or rate coefficient and at very few places velocity constant or specific rate of reaction Its value may depend on conditions such as temperature ionic strength surface area of an adsorbent or light irradiation If the reaction goes to completion the rate equation for the reaction rate v k A x B y displaystyle v k ce A x ce B y applies throughout the course of the reaction Elementary single step reactions and reaction steps have reaction orders equal to the stoichiometric coefficients for each reactant The overall reaction order i e the sum of stoichiometric coefficients of reactants is always equal to the molecularity of the elementary reaction However complex multi step reactions may or may not have reaction orders equal to their stoichiometric coefficients This implies that the order and the rate equation of a given reaction cannot be reliably deduced from the stoichiometry and must be determined experimentally since an unknown reaction mechanism could be either elementary or complex When the experimental rate equation has been determined it is often of use for deduction of the reaction mechanism The rate equation of a reaction with an assumed multi step mechanism can often be derived theoretically using quasi steady state assumptions from the underlying elementary reactions and compared with the experimental rate equation as a test of the assumed mechanism The equation may involve a fractional order and may depend on the concentration of an intermediate species A reaction can also have an undefined reaction order with respect to a reactant if the rate is not simply proportional to some power of the concentration of that reactant for example one cannot talk about reaction order in the rate equation for a bimolecular reaction between adsorbed molecules v 0 k K 1 K 2 C A C B 1 K 1 C A K 2 C B 2 displaystyle v 0 k frac K 1 K 2 C A C B 1 K 1 C A K 2 C B 2 Contents 1 Definition 2 Power laws 2 1 Determination of reaction order 2 1 1 Method of initial rates 2 1 2 Integral method 2 1 3 Method of flooding 2 2 Zero order 2 3 First order 2 4 Second order 2 5 Pseudo first order 2 6 Summary for reaction orders 0 1 2 and n 2 7 Fractional order 3 Complex laws 3 1 Mixed order 3 2 Negative order 4 Opposed reactions 4 1 Simple example 4 2 Generalization of simple example 5 Consecutive reactions 6 Parallel or competitive reactions 6 1 Two first order reactions 6 2 One first order and one second order reaction 7 Stoichiometric reaction networks 8 General dynamics of unimolecular conversion 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Books cited 11 External linksDefinition editMain article Reaction rate Consider a typical chemical reaction in which two reactants A and B combine to form a product C A 2 B 3 C displaystyle ce A 2B gt 3C nbsp This can also be written 0 A 2 B 3 C displaystyle 0 mathrm A 2 mathrm B 3 mathrm C nbsp The prefactors 1 2 and 3 with negative signs for reactants because they are consumed are known as stoichiometric coefficients One molecule of A combines with two of B to form 3 of C so if we use the symbol X for the number of moles of chemical X 3 d A d t 1 2 d B d t 1 3 d C d t displaystyle frac d mathrm A dt frac 1 2 frac d mathrm B dt frac 1 3 frac d mathrm C dt nbsp If the reaction takes place in a closed system at constant temperature and volume without a build up of reaction intermediates the reaction rate v displaystyle v nbsp is defined as v 1 n i d X i d t displaystyle v frac 1 nu i frac d mathrm X i dt nbsp where ni is the stoichiometric coefficient for chemical Xi with a negative sign for a reactant 4 The initial reaction rate v 0 v t 0 displaystyle v 0 v t 0 nbsp has some functional dependence on the concentrations of the reactants v 0 f A B displaystyle v 0 f left mathrm A mathrm B ldots right nbsp and this dependence is known as the rate equation or rate law 5 This law generally cannot be deduced from the chemical equation and must be determined by experiment 6 Power laws editA common form for the rate equation is a power law 6 v 0 k A x B y displaystyle v 0 k ce A x ce B y cdots nbsp The constant k displaystyle k nbsp is called the rate constant The exponents which can be fractional 6 are called partial orders of reaction and their sum is the overall order of reaction 7 In a dilute solution an elementary reaction one having a single step with a single transition state is empirically found to obey the law of mass action This predicts that the rate depends only on the concentrations of the reactants raised to the powers of their stoichiometric coefficients 8 Determination of reaction order edit Method of initial rates edit The natural logarithm of the power law rate equation is ln v 0 ln k x ln A y ln B displaystyle ln v 0 ln k x ln ce A y ln ce B cdots nbsp This can be used to estimate the order of reaction of each reactant For example the initial rate can be measured in a series of experiments at different initial concentrations of reactant A displaystyle rm A nbsp with all other concentrations B C displaystyle rm B rm C dots nbsp kept constant so that ln v 0 x ln A constant displaystyle ln v 0 x ln ce A textrm constant nbsp The slope of a graph of ln v displaystyle ln v nbsp as a function of ln A displaystyle ln ce A nbsp then corresponds to the order x displaystyle x nbsp with respect to reactant A displaystyle rm A nbsp 9 10 However this method is not always reliable because measurement of the initial rate requires accurate determination of small changes in concentration in short times compared to the reaction half life and is sensitive to errors and the rate equation will not be completely determined if the rate also depends on substances not present at the beginning of the reaction such as intermediates or products Integral method edit The tentative rate equation determined by the method of initial rates is therefore normally verified by comparing the concentrations measured over a longer time several half lives with the integrated form of the rate equation this assumes that the reaction goes to completion For example the integrated rate law for a first order reaction is ln A k t ln A 0 displaystyle ln ce A kt ln ce A 0 nbsp where A displaystyle rm A nbsp is the concentration at time t displaystyle t nbsp and A 0 displaystyle rm A 0 nbsp is the initial concentration at zero time The first order rate law is confirmed if ln A displaystyle ln ce A nbsp is in fact a linear function of time In this case the rate constant k displaystyle k nbsp is equal to the slope with sign reversed 11 12 Method of flooding edit The partial order with respect to a given reactant can be evaluated by the method of flooding or of isolation of Ostwald In this method the concentration of one reactant is measured with all other reactants in large excess so that their concentration remains essentially constant For a reaction a A b B c C with rate law v 0 k A x B y displaystyle v 0 k cdot rm A x cdot rm B y nbsp the partial order x displaystyle x nbsp with respect to A displaystyle rm A nbsp is determined using a large excess of B displaystyle rm B nbsp In this casev 0 k A x displaystyle v 0 k cdot rm A x nbsp with k k B y displaystyle k k cdot rm B y nbsp and x displaystyle x nbsp may be determined by the integral method The order y displaystyle y nbsp with respect to B displaystyle rm B nbsp under the same conditions with B displaystyle rm B nbsp in excess is determined by a series of similar experiments with a range of initial concentration B 0 displaystyle rm B 0 nbsp so that the variation of k displaystyle k nbsp can be measured 13 Zero order edit For zero order reactions the reaction rate is independent of the concentration of a reactant so that changing its concentration has no effect on the rate of the reaction Thus the concentration changes linearly with time This may occur when there is a bottleneck which limits the number of reactant molecules that can react at the same time for example if the reaction requires contact with an enzyme or a catalytic surface 14 Many enzyme catalyzed reactions are zero order provided that the reactant concentration is much greater than the enzyme concentration which controls the rate so that the enzyme is saturated For example the biological oxidation of ethanol to acetaldehyde by the enzyme liver alcohol dehydrogenase LADH is zero order in ethanol 15 Similarly reactions with heterogeneous catalysis can be zero order if the catalytic surface is saturated For example the decomposition of phosphine PH3 on a hot tungsten surface at high pressure is zero order in phosphine which decomposes at a constant rate 14 In homogeneous catalysis zero order behavior can come about from reversible inhibition For example ring opening metathesis polymerization using third generation Grubbs catalyst exhibits zero order behavior in catalyst due to the reversible inhibition that occurs between pyridine and the ruthenium center 16 First order edit A first order reaction depends on the concentration of only one reactant a unimolecular reaction Other reactants can be present but their concentration has no effect on the rate The rate law for a first order reaction is d A d t k A displaystyle frac d ce A dt k ce A nbsp Although not affecting the above math the majority of first order reactions proceed via intermolecular collisions Such collisions which contribute the energy to the reactant are necessarily second order The rate of these collisions is however masked by the fact that the rate determining step remains the unimolecular breakdown of the energized reactant The half life is independent of the starting concentration and is given by t 1 2 ln 2 k textstyle t 1 2 frac ln 2 k nbsp The mean lifetime is t 1 k 17 Examples of such reactions are 2 N 2 O 5 4 NO 2 O 2 displaystyle ce 2N2O5 gt 4NO2 O2 nbsp 18 19 CoCl NH 3 5 2 H 2 O Co H 2 O NH 3 5 3 Cl displaystyle ce CoCl NH3 5 2 H2O gt Co H2O NH3 5 3 Cl nbsp H 2 O 2 H 2 O 1 2 O 2 displaystyle ce H2O2 gt H2O 1 2O2 nbsp 20 In organic chemistry the class of SN1 nucleophilic substitution unimolecular reactions consists of first order reactions For example in the reaction of aryldiazonium ions with nucleophiles in aqueous solution ArN 2 X ArX N2 the rate equation is v 0 k ArN 2 displaystyle v 0 k ce ArN2 nbsp where Ar indicates an aryl group 21 Second order edit A reaction is said to be second order when the overall order is two The rate of a second order reaction may be proportional to one concentration squared v 0 k A 2 displaystyle v 0 k ce A 2 nbsp or more commonly to the product of two concentrations v 0 k A B displaystyle v 0 k ce A ce B nbsp As an example of the first type the reaction NO2 CO NO CO2 is second order in the reactant NO2 and zero order in the reactant CO The observed rate is given by v 0 k NO 2 2 displaystyle v 0 k ce NO2 2 nbsp and is independent of the concentration of CO 22 For the rate proportional to a single concentration squared the time dependence of the concentration is given by 1 A 1 A 0 k t displaystyle frac 1 ce A frac 1 ce A 0 kt nbsp The time dependence for a rate proportional to two unequal concentrations is A B A 0 B 0 e A 0 B 0 k t displaystyle frac ce A ce B frac ce A 0 ce B 0 e left ce A 0 ce B 0 right kt nbsp if the concentrations are equal they satisfy the previous equation The second type includes nucleophilic addition elimination reactions such as the alkaline hydrolysis of ethyl acetate 21 CH 3 COOC 2 H 5 OH CH 3 COO C 2 H 5 OH displaystyle ce CH3COOC2H5 OH gt CH3COO C2H5OH nbsp This reaction is first order in each reactant and second order overall v 0 k CH 3 COOC 2 H 5 OH displaystyle v 0 k ce CH3COOC2H5 ce OH nbsp If the same hydrolysis reaction is catalyzed by imidazole the rate equation becomes 21 v 0 k imidazole CH 3 COOC 2 H 5 displaystyle v 0 k text imidazole ce CH3COOC2H5 nbsp The rate is first order in one reactant ethyl acetate and also first order in imidazole which as a catalyst does not appear in the overall chemical equation Another well known class of second order reactions are the SN2 bimolecular nucleophilic substitution reactions such as the reaction of n butyl bromide with sodium iodide in acetone CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 Br NaI CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 I NaBr displaystyle ce CH3CH2CH2CH2Br NaI gt CH3CH2CH2CH2I NaBr v nbsp This same compound can be made to undergo a bimolecular E2 elimination reaction another common type of second order reaction if the sodium iodide and acetone are replaced with sodium tert butoxide as the salt and tert butanol as the solvent CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 Br NaO t Bu CH 3 CH 2 CH CH 2 NaBr HO t Bu displaystyle ce CH3CH2CH2CH2Br NaO mathit t Bu gt CH3CH2CH CH2 NaBr HO mathit t Bu nbsp Pseudo first order edit If the concentration of a reactant remains constant because it is a catalyst or because it is in great excess with respect to the other reactants its concentration can be included in the rate constant leading to a pseudo first order or occasionally pseudo second order rate equation For a typical second order reaction with rate equation v 0 k A B displaystyle v 0 k ce A ce B nbsp if the concentration of reactant B is constant then v 0 k A B k A displaystyle v 0 k ce A ce B k ce A nbsp where the pseudo first order rate constant k k B displaystyle k k ce B nbsp The second order rate equation has been reduced to a pseudo first order rate equation which makes the treatment to obtain an integrated rate equation much easier One way to obtain a pseudo first order reaction is to use a large excess of one reactant say B A so that as the reaction progresses only a small fraction of the reactant in excess B is consumed and its concentration can be considered to stay constant For example the hydrolysis of esters by dilute mineral acids follows pseudo first order kinetics where the concentration of water is constant because it is present in large excess CH 3 COOCH 3 H 2 O CH 3 COOH CH 3 OH displaystyle ce CH3COOCH3 H2O gt CH3COOH CH3OH nbsp The hydrolysis of sucrose C12H22O11 in acid solution is often cited as a first order reaction with rate v 0 k C 12 H 22 O 11 displaystyle v 0 k ce C12H22O11 nbsp The true rate equation is third order v 0 k C 12 H 22 O 11 H H 2 O displaystyle v 0 k ce C12H22O11 ce H ce H2O nbsp however the concentrations of both the catalyst H and the solvent H2O are normally constant so that the reaction is pseudo first order 23 Summary for reaction orders 0 1 2 and n edit Elementary reaction steps with order 3 called ternary reactions are rare and unlikely to occur However overall reactions composed of several elementary steps can of course be of any including non integer order Zero order First order Second order nth order g 1 n Rate Law d A d t k displaystyle d ce A dt k nbsp d A d t k A displaystyle d ce A dt k ce A nbsp d A d t k A 2 displaystyle d ce A dt k ce A 2 nbsp 24 d A d t k A n displaystyle d ce A dt k ce A n nbsp Integrated Rate Law A A 0 k t displaystyle ce A A 0 kt nbsp A A 0 e k t displaystyle ce A A 0 e kt nbsp 1 A 1 A 0 k t displaystyle frac 1 ce A frac 1 ce A 0 kt nbsp 24 A g A 0 g g k t displaystyle ce A g ce A 0 g gkt nbsp Except first order Units of Rate Constant k M s displaystyle rm frac M s nbsp 1 s displaystyle rm frac 1 s nbsp 1 M s displaystyle rm frac 1 M cdot s nbsp M g s displaystyle frac rm M g rm s nbsp Linear Plot to determine k A vs t ln A displaystyle ce ln A nbsp vs t 1 A displaystyle ce frac 1 A nbsp vs t A g displaystyle ce rm A g nbsp vs t Except first order Half life t 1 2 A 0 2 k displaystyle t frac 1 2 frac ce A 0 2k nbsp t 1 2 ln 2 k displaystyle t frac 1 2 frac ln 2 k nbsp t 1 2 1 k A 0 displaystyle t frac 1 2 frac 1 k ce A 0 nbsp 24 t 1 2 A 0 g 1 2 g g k displaystyle t frac 1 2 frac ce A 0 g 1 2 g gk nbsp Limit is necessary for first order Here M displaystyle rm M nbsp stands for concentration in molarity mol L 1 t displaystyle t nbsp for time and k displaystyle k nbsp for the reaction rate constant The half life of a first order reaction is often expressed as t1 2 0 693 k as ln 2 0 693 Fractional order edit In fractional order reactions the order is a non integer which often indicates a chemical chain reaction or other complex reaction mechanism For example the pyrolysis of acetaldehyde CH3CHO into methane and carbon monoxide proceeds with an order of 1 5 with respect to acetaldehyde v 0 k CH 3 CHO 3 2 displaystyle v 0 k ce CH3CHO 3 2 nbsp 25 The decomposition of phosgene COCl2 to carbon monoxide and chlorine has order 1 with respect to phosgene itself and order 0 5 with respect to chlorine v 0 k COCl 2 Cl 2 1 2 displaystyle v 0 k ce COCl2 Cl2 1 2 nbsp 26 The order of a chain reaction can be rationalized using the steady state approximation for the concentration of reactive intermediates such as free radicals For the pyrolysis of acetaldehyde the Rice Herzfeld mechanism is Initiation CH 3 CHO CH 3 CHO displaystyle ce CH3CHO gt CH3 CHO nbsp Propagation CH 3 CH 3 CHO CH 3 CO CH 4 displaystyle ce CH3 CH3CHO gt CH3CO CH4 nbsp CH 3 CO CH 3 CO displaystyle ce CH3CO gt CH3 CO nbsp Termination 2 CH 3 C 2 H 6 displaystyle ce 2 CH3 gt C2H6 nbsp where denotes a free radical 25 27 To simplify the theory the reactions of the CHO to form a second CH3 are ignored In the steady state the rates of formation and destruction of methyl radicals are equal so that d CH 3 d t k i CH 3 CHO k t CH 3 2 0 displaystyle frac d ce CH3 dt k i ce CH3CHO k t ce CH3 2 0 nbsp so that the concentration of methyl radical satisfies CH 3 CH 3 CHO 1 2 displaystyle ce CH3 quad propto quad CH3CHO 1 2 nbsp The reaction rate equals the rate of the propagation steps which form the main reaction products CH4 and CO v 0 d CH 4 d t 0 k p CH 3 CH 3 CHO CH 3 CHO 3 2 displaystyle v 0 frac d ce CH4 dt 0 k p ce CH3 CH3CHO quad propto quad ce CH3CHO 3 2 nbsp in agreement with the experimental order of 3 2 25 27 Complex laws editMixed order edit More complex rate laws have been described as being mixed order if they approximate to the laws for more than one order at different concentrations of the chemical species involved For example a rate law of the form v 0 k 1 A k 2 A 2 displaystyle v 0 k 1 A k 2 A 2 nbsp represents concurrent first order and second order reactions or more often concurrent pseudo first order and second order reactions and can be described as mixed first and second order 28 For sufficiently large values of A such a reaction will approximate second order kinetics but for smaller A the kinetics will approximate first order or pseudo first order As the reaction progresses the reaction can change from second order to first order as reactant is consumed Another type of mixed order rate law has a denominator of two or more terms often because the identity of the rate determining step depends on the values of the concentrations An example is the oxidation of an alcohol to a ketone by hexacyanoferrate III ion Fe CN 63 with ruthenate VI ion RuO42 as catalyst 29 For this reaction the rate of disappearance of hexacyanoferrate III is v 0 Fe CN 6 2 k a k b Fe CN 6 2 displaystyle v 0 frac ce Fe CN 6 2 k alpha k beta ce Fe CN 6 2 nbsp This is zero order with respect to hexacyanoferrate III at the onset of the reaction when its concentration is high and the ruthenium catalyst is quickly regenerated but changes to first order when its concentration decreases and the regeneration of catalyst becomes rate determining Notable mechanisms with mixed order rate laws with two term denominators include Michaelis Menten kinetics for enzyme catalysis first order in substrate second order overall at low substrate concentrations zero order in substrate first order overall at higher substrate concentrations and the Lindemann mechanism for unimolecular reactions second order at low pressures first order at high pressures Negative order edit A reaction rate can have a negative partial order with respect to a substance For example the conversion of ozone O3 to oxygen follows the rate equation v 0 k O 3 2 O 2 1 displaystyle v 0 k ce O 3 2 ce O 2 1 nbsp in an excess of oxygen This corresponds to second order in ozone and order 1 with respect to oxygen 30 When a partial order is negative the overall order is usually considered as undefined In the above example for instance the reaction is not described as first order even though the sum of the partial orders is 2 1 1 displaystyle 2 1 1 nbsp because the rate equation is more complex than that of a simple first order reaction Opposed reactions editA pair of forward and reverse reactions may occur simultaneously with comparable speeds For example A and B react into products P and Q and vice versa a b p and q are the stoichiometric coefficients a A b B p P q Q displaystyle ce mathit a A mathit b B lt gt mathit p P mathit q Q nbsp The reaction rate expression for the above reactions assuming each one is elementary can be written as v k 1 A a B b k 1 P p Q q displaystyle v k 1 ce A a ce B b k 1 ce P p ce Q q nbsp where k1 is the rate coefficient for the reaction that consumes A and B k 1 is the rate coefficient for the backwards reaction which consumes P and Q and produces A and B The constants k1 and k 1 are related to the equilibrium coefficient for the reaction K by the following relationship set v 0 in balance k 1 A a B b k 1 P p Q q displaystyle k 1 ce A a ce B b k 1 ce P p ce Q q nbsp K P p Q q A a B b k 1 k 1 displaystyle K frac ce P p ce Q q ce A a ce B b frac k 1 k 1 nbsp nbsp Concentration of A A0 0 25 mol L and B versus time reaching equilibrium k1 2 min 1 and k 1 1 min 1Simple example edit In a simple equilibrium between two species A P displaystyle ce A lt gt P nbsp where the reaction starts with an initial concentration of reactant A A 0 displaystyle ce A 0 nbsp and an initial concentration of 0 for product P at time t 0 Then the equilibrium constant K is expressed as K d e f k 1 k 1 P e A e displaystyle K stackrel mathrm def frac k 1 k 1 frac left ce P right e left ce A right e nbsp where A e displaystyle ce A e nbsp and P e displaystyle ce P e nbsp are the concentrations of A and P at equilibrium respectively The concentration of A at time t A t displaystyle ce A t nbsp is related to the concentration of P at time t P t displaystyle ce P t nbsp by the equilibrium reaction equation A t A 0 P t displaystyle ce A mathit t A 0 P mathit t nbsp The term P 0 displaystyle ce P 0 nbsp is not present because in this simple example the initial concentration of P is 0 This applies even when time t is at infinity i e equilibrium has been reached A e A 0 P e displaystyle ce A mathit e A 0 P mathit e nbsp then it follows by the definition of K that P e k 1 k 1 k 1 A 0 displaystyle ce P e frac k 1 k 1 k 1 ce A 0 nbsp and therefore A e A 0 P e k 1 k 1 k 1 A 0 displaystyle ce A e ce A 0 ce P e frac k 1 k 1 k 1 ce A 0 nbsp These equations allow us to uncouple the system of differential equations and allow us to solve for the concentration of A alone The reaction equation was given previously as v k 1 A a B b k 1 P p Q q displaystyle v k 1 ce A a ce B b k 1 ce P p ce Q q nbsp For A P displaystyle ce A lt gt P nbsp this is simply d A d t k 1 A t k 1 P t displaystyle frac d ce A dt k 1 ce A t k 1 ce P t nbsp The derivative is negative because this is the rate of the reaction going from A to P and therefore the concentration of A is decreasing To simplify notation let x be A t displaystyle ce A t nbsp the concentration of A at time t Let x e displaystyle x e nbsp be the concentration of A at equilibrium Then d A d t k 1 A t k 1 P t d x d t k 1 x k 1 P t k 1 x k 1 A 0 x k 1 k 1 x k 1 A 0 displaystyle begin aligned frac d ce A dt amp k 1 ce A t k 1 ce P t frac dx dt amp k 1 x k 1 ce P t amp k 1 x k 1 ce A 0 x amp k 1 k 1 x k 1 ce A 0 end aligned nbsp Since k 1 k 1 k 1 A 0 x e displaystyle k 1 k 1 k 1 frac ce A 0 x e nbsp the reaction rate becomes d x d t k 1 A 0 x e x e x displaystyle frac dx dt frac k 1 ce A 0 x e x e x nbsp which results in ln A 0 A e A t A e k 1 k 1 t displaystyle ln left frac ce A 0 ce A e ce A t ce A e right k 1 k 1 t nbsp A plot of the negative natural logarithm of the concentration of A in time minus the concentration at equilibrium versus time t gives a straight line with slope k1 k 1 By measurement of A e and P e the values of K and the two reaction rate constants will be known 31 Generalization of simple example edit If the concentration at the time t 0 is different from above the simplifications above are invalid and a system of differential equations must be solved However this system can also be solved exactly to yield the following generalized expressions A A 0 1 k 1 k 1 k 1 k 1 e k 1 k 1 t P 0 k 1 k 1 k 1 1 e k 1 k 1 t displaystyle left ce A right ce A 0 frac 1 k 1 k 1 left k 1 k 1 e left k 1 k 1 right t right ce P 0 frac k 1 k 1 k 1 left 1 e left k 1 k 1 right t right nbsp P A 0 k 1 k 1 k 1 1 e k 1 k 1 t P 0 1 k 1 k 1 k 1 k 1 e k 1 k 1 t displaystyle left ce P right ce A 0 frac k 1 k 1 k 1 left 1 e left k 1 k 1 right t right ce P 0 frac 1 k 1 k 1 left k 1 k 1 e left k 1 k 1 right t right nbsp When the equilibrium constant is close to unity and the reaction rates very fast for instance in conformational analysis of molecules other methods are required for the determination of rate constants for instance by complete lineshape analysis in NMR spectroscopy Consecutive reactions editIf the rate constants for the following reaction are k 1 displaystyle k 1 nbsp and k 2 displaystyle k 2 nbsp A B C displaystyle ce A gt B gt C nbsp then the rate equation is For reactant A d A d t k 1 A displaystyle frac d ce A dt k 1 ce A nbsp For reactant B d B d t k 1 A k 2 B displaystyle frac d ce B dt k 1 ce A k 2 ce B nbsp For product C d C d t k 2 B displaystyle frac d ce C dt k 2 ce B nbsp With the individual concentrations scaled by the total population of reactants to become probabilities linear systems of differential equations such as these can be formulated as a master equation The differential equations can be solved analytically and the integrated rate equations are A A 0 e k 1 t displaystyle ce A ce A 0 e k 1 t nbsp B A 0 k 1 k 2 k 1 e k 1 t e k 2 t B 0 e k 2 t k 1 k 2 A 0 k 1 t e k 1 t B 0 e k 1 t otherwise displaystyle left ce B right begin cases ce A 0 frac k 1 k 2 k 1 left e k 1 t e k 2 t right ce B 0 e k 2 t amp k 1 neq k 2 ce A 0 k 1 te k 1 t ce B 0 e k 1 t amp text otherwise end cases nbsp C A 0 1 k 1 e k 2 t k 2 e k 1 t k 2 k 1 B 0 1 e k 2 t C 0 k 1 k 2 A 0 1 e k 1 t k 1 t e k 1 t B 0 1 e k 1 t C 0 otherwise displaystyle left ce C right begin cases ce A 0 left 1 frac k 1 e k 2 t k 2 e k 1 t k 2 k 1 right ce B 0 left 1 e k 2 t right ce C 0 amp k 1 neq k 2 ce A 0 left 1 e k 1 t k 1 te k 1 t right ce B 0 left 1 e k 1 t right ce C 0 amp text otherwise end cases nbsp The steady state approximation leads to very similar results in an easier way Parallel or competitive reactions edit nbsp Time course of two first order competitive reactions with differing rate constants When a substance reacts simultaneously to give two different products a parallel or competitive reaction is said to take place Two first order reactions edit A B displaystyle ce A gt B nbsp and A C displaystyle ce A gt C nbsp with constants k 1 displaystyle k 1 nbsp and k 2 displaystyle k 2 nbsp and rate equations d A d t k 1 k 2 A displaystyle frac d ce A dt k 1 k 2 ce A nbsp d B d t k 1 A displaystyle frac d ce B dt k 1 ce A nbsp and d C d t k 2 A displaystyle frac d ce C dt k 2 ce A nbsp The integrated rate equations are then A A 0 e k 1 k 2 t displaystyle ce A ce A 0 e k 1 k 2 t nbsp B k 1 k 1 k 2 A 0 1 e k 1 k 2 t displaystyle ce B frac k 1 k 1 k 2 ce A 0 left 1 e k 1 k 2 t right nbsp and C k 2 k 1 k 2 A 0 1 e k 1 k 2 t displaystyle ce C frac k 2 k 1 k 2 ce A 0 left 1 e k 1 k 2 t right nbsp One important relationship in this case is B C k 1 k 2 displaystyle frac ce B ce C frac k 1 k 2 nbsp One first order and one second order reaction edit This can be the case when studying a bimolecular reaction and a simultaneous hydrolysis which can be treated as pseudo order one takes place the hydrolysis complicates the study of the reaction kinetics because some reactant is being spent in a parallel reaction For example A reacts with R to give our product C but meanwhile the hydrolysis reaction takes away an amount of A to give B a byproduct A H 2 O B displaystyle ce A H2O gt B nbsp and A R C displaystyle ce A R gt C nbsp The rate equations are d B d t k 1 A H 2 O k 1 A displaystyle frac d ce B dt k 1 ce A H2O k 1 ce A nbsp and d C d t k 2 A R displaystyle frac d ce C dt k 2 ce A R nbsp where k 1 displaystyle k 1 nbsp is the pseudo first order constant 32 The integrated rate equation for the main product C is C R 0 1 e k 2 k 1 A 0 1 e k 1 t displaystyle ce C R 0 left 1 e frac k 2 k 1 ce A 0 left 1 e k 1 t right right nbsp which is equivalent to ln R 0 R 0 C k 2 A 0 k 1 1 e k 1 t displaystyle ln frac ce R 0 ce R 0 C frac k 2 ce A 0 k 1 left 1 e k 1 t right nbsp Concentration of B is related to that of C through B k 1 k 2 ln 1 C R 0 displaystyle ce B frac k 1 k 2 ln left 1 frac ce C ce R 0 right nbsp The integrated equations were analytically obtained but during the process it was assumed that A 0 C A 0 displaystyle ce A 0 ce C approx ce A 0 nbsp Therefore previous equation for C can only be used for low concentrations of C compared to A 0Stoichiometric reaction networks editThe most general description of a chemical reaction network considers a number N displaystyle N nbsp of distinct chemical species reacting via R displaystyle R nbsp reactions 33 34 The chemical equation of the j displaystyle j nbsp th reaction can then be written in the generic form r 1 j X 1 r 2 j X 2 r N j X N k j p 1 j X 1 p 2 j X 2 p N j X N displaystyle r 1j ce X 1 r 2j ce X 2 cdots r Nj ce X N ce gt k j p 1j ce X 1 p 2j ce X 2 cdots p Nj ce X N nbsp which is often written in the equivalent form i 1 N r i j X i k j i 1 N p i j X i displaystyle sum i 1 N r ij ce X i ce gt k j sum i 1 N p ij ce X i nbsp Here j displaystyle j nbsp is the reaction index running from 1 to R displaystyle R nbsp X i displaystyle ce X i nbsp denotes the i displaystyle i nbsp th chemical species k j displaystyle k j nbsp is the rate constant of the j displaystyle j nbsp th reaction and r i j displaystyle r ij nbsp and p i j displaystyle p ij nbsp are the stoichiometric coefficients of reactants and products respectively The rate of such a reaction can be inferred by the law of mass action f j X k j z 1 N X z r z j displaystyle f j vec ce X k j prod z 1 N ce X z r zj nbsp which denotes the flux of molecules per unit time and unit volume Here X X 1 X 2 X N displaystyle ce vec X X1 X2 ldots X mathit N nbsp is the vector of concentrations This definition includes the elementary reactions zero order reactions for which r z j 0 displaystyle r zj 0 nbsp for all z displaystyle z nbsp first order reactions for which r z j 1 displaystyle r zj 1 nbsp for a single z displaystyle z nbsp second order reactions for which r z j 1 displaystyle r zj 1 nbsp for exactly two z displaystyle z nbsp that is a bimolecular reaction or r z j 2 displaystyle r zj 2 nbsp for a single z displaystyle z nbsp that is a dimerization reaction Each of these is discussed in detail below One can define the stoichiometric matrix N i j p i j r i j displaystyle N ij p ij r ij nbsp denoting the net extent of molecules of i displaystyle i nbsp in reaction j displaystyle j nbsp The reaction rate equations can then be written in the general form d X i d t j 1 R r i j f j X displaystyle frac d ce X i dt sum j 1 R r ij f j vec ce X nbsp This is the product of the stoichiometric matrix and the vector of reaction rate functions Particular simple solutions exist in equilibrium d X i d t 0 displaystyle frac d ce X i dt 0 nbsp for systems composed of merely reversible reactions In this case the rate of the forward and backward reactions are equal a principle called detailed balance Detailed balance is a property of the stoichiometric matrix N i j displaystyle N ij nbsp alone and does not depend on the particular form of the rate functions f j displaystyle f j nbsp All other cases where detailed balance is violated are commonly studied by flux balance analysis which has been developed to understand metabolic pathways 35 36 General dynamics of unimolecular conversion editFor a general unimolecular reaction involving interconversion of N displaystyle N nbsp different species whose concentrations at time t displaystyle t nbsp are denoted by X 1 t displaystyle X 1 t nbsp through X N t displaystyle X N t nbsp an analytic form for the time evolution of the species can be found Let the rate constant of conversion from species X i displaystyle X i nbsp to species X j displaystyle X j nbsp be denoted as k i j displaystyle k ij nbsp and construct a rate constant matrix K displaystyle K nbsp whose entries are the k i j displaystyle k ij nbsp Also let X t X 1 t X 2 t X N t T displaystyle X t X 1 t X 2 t ldots X N t T nbsp be the vector of concentrations as a function of time Let J 1 1 1 1 T displaystyle J 1 1 1 ldots 1 T nbsp be the vector of ones Let I displaystyle I nbsp be the N N displaystyle N times N nbsp identity matrix Let Diag displaystyle operatorname Diag nbsp be the function that takes a vector and constructs a diagonal matrix whose on diagonal entries are those of the vector Let L 1 displaystyle mathcal L 1 nbsp be the inverse Laplace transform from s displaystyle s nbsp to t displaystyle t nbsp Then the time evolved state X t displaystyle X t nbsp is given by X t L 1 s I Diag K J K T 1 X 0 displaystyle X t mathcal L 1 sI operatorname Diag KJ K T 1 X 0 nbsp thus providing the relation between the initial conditions of the system and its state at time t displaystyle t nbsp See also editMichaelis Menten kinetics Molecularity Petersen matrix Reaction diffusion system Reactions on surfaces rate equations for reactions where at least one of the reactants adsorbs onto a surface Reaction progress kinetic analysis Reaction rate Reaction rate constant Steady state approximation Gillespie algorithm Balance equation Belousov Zhabotinsky reaction Lotka Volterra equations Chemical kineticsReferences edit Gold Victor ed 2019 The IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology The Gold Book 4 ed Research Triangle Park NC International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry IUPAC doi 10 1351 goldbook a b 14 3 Effect of Concentration on Reaction Rates The Rate Law Chemistry LibreTexts 2015 01 18 Retrieved 2023 04 10 Atkins amp de Paula 2006 p 794 IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 Rate of reaction doi 10 1351 goldbook R05156 Atkins amp de Paula 2006 p 795 a b c Atkins amp de Paula 2006 p 796 Connors 1990 p 13 Connors 1990 p 12 Atkins amp de Paula 2006 pp 797 8 Espenson 1987 pp 5 8 Atkins amp de Paula 2006 pp 798 800 Espenson 1987 pp 15 18 Espenson 1987 pp 30 31 a b Atkins amp de Paula 2006 p 796 Tinoco amp Wang 1995 p 331 Walsh Dylan J Lau Sii Hong Hyatt Michael G Guironnet Damien 2017 09 25 Kinetic Study of Living Ring Opening Metathesis Polymerization with Third Generation Grubbs Catalysts Journal of the American Chemical Society 139 39 13644 13647 doi 10 1021 jacs 7b08010 ISSN 0002 7863 PMID 28944665 Espenson James H 1981 Chemical Kinetics and Reaction Mechanisms McGraw Hill p 14 ISBN 0 07 019667 2 Atkins amp de Paula 2006 pp 813 4 Keith J Laidler Chemical Kinetics 3rd ed Harper amp Row 1987 p 303 5 ISBN 0 06 043862 2 R H Petrucci W S Harwood and F G Herring General Chemistry 8th ed Prentice Hall 2002 p 588 ISBN 0 13 014329 4 a b c Connors 1990 Whitten K W Galley K D and Davis R E General Chemistry 4th edition Saunders 1992 pp 638 9 ISBN 0 03 072373 6 Tinoco amp Wang 1995 pp 328 9 a b c NDRL Radiation Chemistry Data Center See also Capellos Christos Bielski Benon H 1972 Kinetic systems mathematical description of chemical kinetics in solution New York Wiley Interscience ISBN 978 0471134503 OCLC 247275 a b c Atkins amp de Paula 2006 p 830 Laidler 1987 p 301 a b Laidler 1987 pp 310 311 Espenson 1987 pp 34 60 Mucientes Antonio E de la Pena Maria A November 2006 Ruthenium VI Catalyzed Oxidation of Alcohols by Hexacyanoferrate III An Example of Mixed Order Journal of Chemical Education 83 11 1643 doi 10 1021 ed083p1643 ISSN 0021 9584 Laidler 1987 p 305 Rushton Gregory T Burns William G Lavin Judi M Chong Yong S Pellechia Perry Shimizu Ken D September 2007 Determination of the Rotational Barrier for Kinetically Stable Conformational Isomers via NMR and 2D TLC Journal of Chemical Education 84 9 1499 doi 10 1021 ed084p1499 ISSN 0021 9584 Manso Jose A Perez Prior M Teresa Garcia Santos M del Pilar Calle Emilio Casado Julio 2005 A Kinetic Approach to the Alkylating Potential of Carcinogenic Lactones Chemical Research in Toxicology 18 7 1161 1166 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 632 3473 doi 10 1021 tx050031d PMID 16022509 Heinrich Reinhart Schuster Stefan 2012 The Regulation of Cellular Systems Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 9781461311614 Chen Luonan Wang Ruiqi Li Chunguang Aihara Kazuyuki 2010 Modeling Biomolecular Networks in Cells doi 10 1007 978 1 84996 214 8 ISBN 978 1 84996 213 1 Szallasi Z and Stelling J and Periwal V 2006 System modeling in cell biology from concepts to nuts and bolts MIT Press Cambridge Iglesias Pablo A Ingalls Brian P 2010 Control theory and systems biology MIT Press ISBN 9780262013345 Books cited edit Atkins Peter de Paula Julio 2006 The rates of chemical reactions Atkins Physical chemistry 8th ed W H Freeman pp 791 823 ISBN 0 7167 8759 8 Connors Kenneth Antonio 1990 Chemical kinetics the study of reaction rates in solution John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9781560810063 Espenson James H 1987 Chemical kinetics and reaction mechanisms 2nd ed McGraw Hill ISBN 9780071139496 Laidler Keith James 1987 Chemical kinetics 3rd ed Harper amp Row ISBN 9780060438623 Tinoco Ignacio Jr Wang James C 1995 Physical chemistry principles and applications in biological sciences 3rd ed Prentice Hall ISBN 9780131865457 External links editChemical kinetics reaction rate and order needs flash player Reaction kinetics examples of important rate laws lecture with audio Rates of Reaction Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rate equation amp oldid 1176100902, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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