MarketDiffusion-controlled reaction
Company Profile

Diffusion-controlled reaction

Diffusion-controlled reactions are reactions in which the reaction rate is equal to the rate of transport of the reactants through the reaction medium.

Occurrence
Diffusion control is rare in the gas phase, where rates of diffusion of molecules are generally very high. Diffusion control is more likely in solution where diffusion of reactants is slower due to the greater number of collisions with solvent molecules. Reactions where the activated complex forms easily and the products form rapidly are most likely to be limited by diffusion control. Examples are those involving catalysis and enzymatic reactions. Heterogeneous reactions where reactants are in different phases are also candidates for diffusion control. One classical test for diffusion control of a heterogeneous reaction is to observe whether the rate of reaction is affected by stirring or agitation; if so then the reaction is almost certainly diffusion controlled under those conditions. ==Diffusion limit==
Diffusion limit
Consider a reaction, in which the rate-limiting elementary reaction step is of the form :A + B → C and occurs at rate k_r when molecules of A and B touch. For a bulk system, the observed reaction rate k is depressed, because molecules of A and B must diffuse towards each other before reacting. At very large values of k_r, the bulk reaction occurs at a rate k_D which is relatively independent of the properties of the reaction itself. The following derivation is adapted from Foundations of Chemical Kinetics. Consider sphere of radius R_A, centered at a spherical molecule A, with reactant B flowing in and out of it; molecules A and B touch when the distance between the two molecules is R_{AB} apart. Thus [B](R_{AB})k_r = [B]k, where [B](r) is the smoothed "local concentration" of B at position r. If we assume a local steady state, then the average rate at which B reaches R_{AB} corresponds to the observed reaction rate k. This can be written as: {{NumBlk|| [B]k=-4\pi r^2 J_{B}\text{,}|}} where J_{B} is the flux of B into the sphere. By Fick's law of diffusion, {{NumBlk|| J_{B} = -D_{AB} \left(\frac{d[B](r)}{dr} +\frac{[B](r)}{k_{B}T} \frac{dU}{dr}\right)\text{,}|}} where D_{AB} is the diffusion coefficient, obtained by the Stokes-Einstein equation. The second term is the positional gradient of the chemical potential. Inserting into gives {{NumBlk||[B]k = 4\pi r^2 D_{AB}\left(\frac{dB(r)}{dr}+\frac{[B](r)}{k_{B}T} \frac{dU}{dr}\right)\text{.}|}} It is convenient at this point to use the identity \exp\left(-\frac{U(r)}{k_{B}T}\right)\frac{d}{dr}\left([B](r)\exp\left(\frac{U(r)}{k_{B}T}\right)\right) = \frac{d[B](r)}{dr}+\frac{[B](r)}{k_{B}T} \frac{dU}{dr} and rewrite as {{NumBlk||[B]k = 4\pi r^2 D_{AB} \exp\left(-\frac{U(r)}{k_{B}T}\right)\frac{d}{dr}\left([B](r)\exp\left(\frac{U(r)}{k_{B}T}\right)\right)|}} Thus {{NumBlk||k\cdot\frac{[B]}{4\pi r^2 D_{AB}}\exp\left(\frac{U(r)}{k_{B}T}\right) = \frac{d}{dr}\left([B](r)\exp\left(\frac{U(r)}{k_{B}T}\right)\right)|}} which is an ordinary differential equation in [B](r). Using the boundary conditions that [B](r)\rightarrow [B], ie the local concentration of B approaches that of the solution at large distances, and consequently U(r) \rightarrow 0 as r \rightarrow \infty , we can solve by separation of variables. Namely: {{NumBlk|| \int_{R_{AB}}^{\infty} \frac{[B]k\,dr}{4\pi r^2 D_{AB}}\exp\left(\frac{U(r)}{k_{B}T}\right) = \int_{R_{AB}}^{\infty} d\left([B](r)\exp\left(\frac{U(r)}{k_{B}T}\right)\right)|}} Defining \beta^{-1} = \int_{R_{AB}}^{\infty} \frac{1}{r^2}\exp\left(\frac{U(r)}{k_B T}\right)\,dr\text{,} simplifies to {{NumBlk|| \frac{[B]k}{4\pi D_{AB}\beta }= [B]-[B](R_{AB})\exp\left(\frac{U(R_{AB})}{k_{B}T}\right)|}} From the definition of k_r, we have . Substituting this into and rearranging yields {{NumBlk|| k = \frac{4\pi D_{AB}\beta k_r }{k_r + 4\pi D_{AB} \beta \exp\left(\frac{U(R_{AB} )}{k_B T}\right) } |}} Taking k_r very large gives the diffusion-limited reaction rate k_D = 4\pi D_{AB} \beta\text{.} can then be re-written as the "diffusion influenced rate constant" {{NumBlk|| k= \frac{k_D k_r}{k_r + k_D \exp\left(\frac{U(R_{AB} )}{k_B T}\right)} |}} If the forces that bind A and B together are weak, i.e. U(r) \approx 0 for all r>R_{AB}, then \beta^{-1} \approx \frac{1}{R_{AB}} In that case, simplifies even further to {{NumBlk|| k = \frac{k_D k_r}{k_r + k_D} |}} This equation is true for a very large proportion of industrially relevant reactions in solution. Viscosity dependence The Stokes-Einstein equation describes a frictional force on a sphere of diameter R_A as D_A = \frac{k_BT}{3\pi R_A \eta} where \eta is the viscosity of the solution. Inserting this into gives an estimate for k_D as \frac{8 RT}{3\eta} , where R is the gas constant, and \eta is given in centipoise: == See also ==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com