activation energy (Ea) - minimum amount of energy needed for reaction to occur
- kinetic energy of colliding molecules used to break bonds
- activated complex (transition state) - atomic arrangement at the point of highest energy
- lower activation energy >> faster reaction rate
- f = e-Ea/RT
- f = fraction of molecules w/ energy equal to or greater than Ea
- R = gas constant
- T = absolute temperature
- Arrhenius equation - takes into account 3 factors (activation energy, # of collisions, fraction of collisions w/ correct orientation)
- k = Ae-Ea/RT
- A = frequency factor constant
- ln (k1/k2) = Ea/R (1/T2 - 1/T1)
- must knowk2 from T2 (another temperature) to calculate k1 and T1)
reaction mechanisms - process by which reaction occurs
- can describe the order in which bonds are broken/formed
- elementary steps (elementary processes) - single event/step
- rate law based on molecularity for each elementary step
- molecularity - describes # of reactant molecules in an elementary step
- unimolecular - single molecule involved (rearrangement)
- bimolecular - collision of 2 molecules
- termolecular - simultaneous collision of 3 molecules (very rare)
- multi-step mechanism - sequence of elementary steps
- elementary steps add up to give overall chemical process
- intermediate - substance that’s not reactant/product in overall reaction
- rate-determining (limiting) step - slowest step, limits overall reaction rate
- rate law of overall reaction = rate law of slowest step
catalyst - substance that changes reaction rate
- doesn’t change during reaction
- lowers overall activation energy
- homogeneous catalyst - in same phase as reactants
- heterogeneous catalyst - in different phase than reactants
- often consists of metals or metal oxides
- adsorption - binding of molecules to surface (1st step)
- active sites - where reactants adsorb
- enzymes - biological catalysts
- usually large protein molecules
- lock-and-key model - substrates fit into enzymes at specific location w/ certain shape
- turnover number - # of catalyzed reactions occurring at an active site