Solution
First, we need to determine the values that we will be plotting: they aren’t the
values right from the table above! We need the following pairs of numbers:
ln k 1/T(K^1 )
29.829 0.00336
29.641 0.00319
29.476 0.00303
See Figure 20.16 for a plot of ln kversus 1/T. Although the three points do
not all lie exactly on a straight line, it is a pretty good approximation of one
(again, indicative of the natural variations in experimental measurements).
The slope, which would equal EA/R, is about 1070, so by multiplying the
ideal gas law constant Rthrough, we get an estimate ofEAas 1070 8.314
J/mol 8900 J/mol. (The temperature unit in the denominator ofRis at-
tached to the 1/Tterm.) The y-intercept of the plot is about 26.3, which is
equal to ln A. Therefore,Ais about 3.78 10 ^12 cm^3 /(moleculesecond).
Notice that Ahas the same units as the given rate constants.
Example 20.9
Use the information derived from Example 20.8 to estimate the rate con-
stant at 370 K. Compare it with the experimentally determined value of
2.10 10 ^13 cm^3 /(moleculesecond).
Solution
With an activation energy of 8900 J/mol, we can use the value ofAand the
given temperature and equation 20.50 directly:
kAeEA/RT
k3.8 10 ^12
molecu
c
l
m
e
3
second
exp
Note how the units cancel in the exponential, as they should. Solving, we
find that
k2.09 10 ^13
molecu
c
l
m
e
3
second
This is very close to the experimentally determined value, showing that the
Arrhenius equation is a good model for this reaction.
If we have two sets of conditions, two versions of equation 20.51, labeled
with 1 and 2 subscripts, can be subtracted to get the following expression:
ln
k
k
1
2
E
R
A
T
1
1
T
1
2
(20.52)
which eliminates the need to know the pre-exponential factor A.
For some reactions, using the van’t Hoff equation as the starting point to
develop the Arrhenius equation is a little simplistic. Rather than assuming that
8900
m
J
ol
8.314 mo
J
lK
(370 K)
704 CHAPTER 20 Kinetics
26
30
0
1/T (K^1 )
lnk
0.001 0.002 0.003
27
28
29
Figure 20.16 See Example 20.8. According to
the plot of ln kversus 1/T, the slope is equal to
EA/Rand the y-intercept is equal to the natural
logarithm of the pre-exponential constant.
According to this plot,EAis 8900 J/mol and Ais
about 3.78 10 ^12 cm^3 /(moleculesecond). See
text for details.