Kinetics Terms

Kinetics Terms

Reaction Kinetics

Measuring how fast a reaction occurs. Someone has to do it, right?

Chemical Kinetics

Just like reaction kinetics.

Kinetics

Just like reaction kinetics, too. Favored by lazy people who don't want to write an extra work.

Equilibrium

Describes a system that is stable, i.e. no longer changing.

Collision Theory

For reactions to happen, atoms or molecules need to smack each other hard enough and in the right geometry. "Bumper car" theory wouldn't be a bad name either.

Activation Energy

Energy needed to make things happen. For couch potatoes, the energy required to get up and go to the bathroom. For reactions, the energy needed to make the reaction happen.

Transition State Theory

Reactions go through a path where they become less like reactants and more like products. Like adolescence for molecules.

Activated Complex

A state in-between reactants and products. A sort of ½ reactant, ½ product, Frankenstein-like creation. It does not last long.

Catalyst

Substance that lowers the activation energy, making a reaction happen faster.

Reaction Rate

How fast a reaction happens under given conditions.

Rate Law

Mathematical expression that describes the kinetics of a given reaction. You can't fight the rate law, it will win.

Rate Constant

That pesky k in the rate law equation.

Reaction Order

Those crazy exponents above the concentrations in a rate law.
  • Zeroth (0th) Order–Exponent = 0
  • First (1st) Order – Exponent = 1
  • Second (2nd) Order – Exponent = 2

Overall Rate Law

Sum of reaction orders of all reactants.

Half-Life

Time needed for the concentration of reactants to go down by ½.

Arrhenius Equation

Equation that relates the rate constant k to activation energy.

Frequency Factor (A)

Constant in Arrhenius equation, which describes how often molecules collide the "proper" way for a reaction to occur. Proper collisions sound very British, but frequency factors can be found anywhere.

Dynamic Equilibrium

Equilibrium where individuals may be changing, but the system as a whole is not changing.

Equilibrium Constant

Constant defined for a reaction at given conditions. [product]coeff-prod./[reactants]coeff-react.

LeChatelier's Principle

A disturbance to an equilibrium system is resisted by the system.

Thermodynamics

The study of heat and energy in chemistry

First Law Of Thermodynamics

Heat + work = change in internal energy. Or q + w = ΔU.

Second Law Of Thermodynamics

The total entropy of the universe (system and surroundings) increases for spontaneous processes.

Third Law Of Thermodynamics

Perfect crystal + absolute zero Kelvin = zero entropy

Internal Energy

Sum of all kinetic and potential energy in a chemical system. Includes bonds and thermal motion.

Heat

Thermal energy transfer from hot to cold. Or Miami's basketball team. Whatever.

Work

Force times distance.

Enthalpy

Heat given off or absorbed in a chemical reaction.

Entropy

A measure of disorder.

Free Energy

Thermodynamics version of a thumbs up or thumbs down for whether a reaction occurs naturally.
  • Reactions with a –ΔG value = Thumbs up.
  • Reactions with a +ΔG value = Thumbs down.

Spontaneity

Describes a reaction with a negative free energy (-ΔG), which occurs without additional energy.

Endothermic

Absorbs heat. Nana Shmoop's hands are endothermic. They'll suck the heat right out of you. Brrr.

Exothermic

A process that releases heat.

Joule

Quantity of heat.