For the overall reaction shown below with a fast equilibrium, why is the true rate law NOT #r(t) = k_2[A][B_2]#? Also, why is the overall reaction order #3//2# and not #3#?
#A_2 stackrel(k_1" ")(rightleftharpoons) A + A# (fast)
#color(white)(aaa)^(color(green)(k_(-1)))#
#A + B_2 stackrel(k_2" ")(=>) AB + B# (slow)
#ul(A + B stackrel(k_3" ")(=>) AB)# (fast)
#A_2 + B_2 stackrel(k_(obs)" ")(->) 2AB#
#A_2 stackrel(k_1" ")(rightleftharpoons) A + A# (fast)
#color(white)(aaa)^(color(green)(k_(-1)))#
#A + B_2 stackrel(k_2" ")(=>) AB + B# (slow)
#ul(A + B stackrel(k_3" ")(=>) AB)# (fast)
#A_2 + B_2 stackrel(k_(obs)" ")(->) 2AB#
1 Answer
I see what happened; what you wrote was a rate law that incorporated the intermediate
OVERALL REACTION
#\mathbf(A_2 + B_2 stackrel(k_(obs)" ")(->) 2AB)#
where
REACTION MECHANISM
#color(green)(A_2 stackrel(k_1" ")(rightleftharpoons) A + A)#
#color(white)(aaa)^(color(green)(k_(-1)))#
#color(green)(A + B_2 stackrel(k_2" ")(=>) AB + B)#
#color(green)(A + B stackrel(k_3" ")(=>) AB)# where
#=># indicates an elementary step, i.e. a step with no implicit mechanism.
An elementary step has no intermediates and only one transition state. So, we know that that's exactly how that step happens and we can treat each reactant as first order.
(If there was
THE FAST EQUILIBRIUM APPROXIMATION
Since the equilibrium is stated to be fast, apparently we are using the fast equilibrium approximation. We would not know this if we were not told the equilibrium was fast.
If we were told that the first step was slow, it could have been the steady-state approximation, which is not the same. That assumption says that
Under the fast equilibrium approximation, though:
- The reactant
#A_2# and intermediate#A# (but not#B# ) are assumed to be in equilibrium for the equilibrium step.#r_1(t)# #">>"# #r_2(t)# , therefore#k_1# #">>"# #k_2# .#color(blue)(K_1 = (k_1)/(k_(-1)) = ([A]^2)/([A_2]))# because equilibrium is assumed to be already established.- (
#K_1# is evidently the equilibrium constant for step 1.)
So what's happening overall here is that the equilibrium is reached quickly, and then intermediate
THE RATE OF THE RATE-DETERMINING STEP CAN BE USED TO REPRESENT THE OVERALL REACTION
When writing the rate law for this, we would say that the slow step (associated with
So, the rate law for that particular step is a good approximation to the actual rate law. In other words,
#r(t) = k_(obs)[A_2][B_2] ~~ r_2(t) = k_2[A][B_2]#
THE RATE LAW MUST CONTAIN ONLY REACTANTS PRESENT IN THE OVERALL REACTION
But we do have a problem:
Otherwise, it would be a completely different reaction:
#color(red)(2)A + B_2 stackrel(k_(obs)" ")(->) 2AB#
DETERMINING THE OBSERVED RATE CONSTANT
From the fast-equilibrium approximation and bullet point 3, we get:
#[A] = ((k_1[A_2])/(k_(-1)))^"1/2"#
So our new rate law is:
#r(t) = k_2((k_1[A_2])/(k_(-1)))^"1/2"[B_2]#
Simplifying this, we get:
#color(blue)(r(t) = stackrel(k_(obs))overbrace(k_2((k_1)/(k_(-1)))^"1/2")[A_2]^"1/2"[B_2])#
And remember that we got
Therefore, the reaction order overall is