Physical Chemistry Third Edition

(C. Jardin) #1

516 11 The Rates of Chemical Reactions


Light source

Monochromator

Reservoir
Light beam syringes

Stop
syringe Device for
driving
syringes
Trigger
switch

To oscilloscope

Mixing unit

Photomultiplier Constant-temperature bath

Cuvette

Drain
valve
block

Mixing
jet

Drive
syringes

A

B

Figure 11.7 A Stopped-Flow Apparatus (Schematic).

reactants and products at equilibrium at a fairly low pressure. On the other side is a
“driver” gas at a higher pressure. When the diaphragm is ruptured the driver gas moves
quickly into the low-pressure chamber. Collisions of the driver gas molecules with the
other molecules produce a shock wave that propagates through the low-pressure gas
and heats it. The reacting system will then relax to the equilibrium state for the new
temperature. The concentration of a reactant or product is monitored spectrophotomet-
rically during this relaxation. This method is applied to reactions that have half-lives in
the range from 1 millisecond to 1 microsecond, but it is limited to gas-phase reactions.

The Flash Photolysis Method


In theflash photolysis method^7 a brief burst of light irradiates the system. If this light is
absorbed it can quickly change the temperature of the system and possibly its compo-
sition. The concentration of a reactant or product is measured spectrophotometrically
as a function of time as the system relaxes to its new equilibrium. Figure 11.8 shows
schematically an apparatus for flash photolysis. Flash photolysis differs from the shock-
wave technique in that the radiation can produce new species as well as change the
temperature of the system.

The Temperature-Jump and Pressure-Jump Methods


In thetemperature-jump(“T-jump”) and thepressure-jump(“P-jump”) methods a
gaseous or liquid system is subjected to a rapid heating or a rapid change in pressure.
A heating pulse can be delivered by a burst of microwave radiation or by the passage of
a brief pulse of electric current if the system is electrically conductive. A rapid change

(^7) See G. Porter,J. Chem. Soc., Faraday Trans., 2, 82 , 2445 (1986) for a historical survey.

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