Hello everybody!
Here's a problem I tried to solve, but I'm not sure about my work, could you check it?
— • —
Putting a certain amount of gaseous buta-1,3-diene (C
4H
6) in a sealed container, at the temperature of 600 K, and measuring at the same T its partial pressure (P), we notice that it changes over time following this law:
where P
0 is P(t=0) and k>0.
a) Justify this experimental effectiveness
b) Deduce the kinetic law written above
c) Find out the relationship between time and the total pressure of the gases
— • —
a) Buta-1,3-diene breaks homolytically due to high temperature into two free radicals (C
2H
3∙)
C
3H
6→2C
2H
3∙
b) A complete and accurate kinetic description of the phenomenon would require the solving of a really complex differential equation which should take into consideration both the direct and the inverse reaction:
$$ -kc+k'\left(c-c_0\right)^2=\frac{dc}{dt} /$$
Here k and k' are the kinetic constants of the direct and inverse reaction while c is the concentration of buta-1,3-diene at the time t and c
0 is the starting concentration.
I think this analysis goes beyond the intent of those who wrote this problem so I chose to neglect the inverse reaction and approximate the exponential trend using the first two term of the Taylor expansion. As usual we have:
and, solving, we find out the law:
which can be written approximately as:
but we also know that (from the Taylor series):
Knowing that P=cRT and putting k'=k/P
0 we have:
c) If we answer the last request using the same approximations we find quite a good relationship if we work with small t values, but an important evidence is lost: when all the buta-1,3-diene molecules are broken into radicals the original pressure is twice the starting one. To underline this fact I preferred to use an exponential function: