| Literature DB >> 31192196 |
Valter H Carvalho-Silva1, Nayara D Coutinho2, Vincenzo Aquilanti2,3.
Abstract
Advances in the understanding of the dependence of reaction rates from temperature, as motivated from progress in experiments and theoretical tools (e. g., molecular dynamics), are needed for the modeling of extreme environmental conditions (e.g., in astrochemistry and in the chemistry of plasmas). While investigating statistical mechanics perspectives (Aquilanti et al., 2017b, 2018), the concept of transitivity was introduced as a measure for the propensity for a reaction to occur. The Transitivity plot is here defined as the reciprocal of the apparent activation energy vs. reciprocal absolute temperature. Since the transitivity function regulates transit in physicochemical transformations, not necessarily involving reference to transition-state hypothesis of Eyring, an extended version is here proposed to cope with general types of transformations. The transitivity plot permits a representation where deviations from Arrhenius behavior are given a geometrical meaning and make explicit a positive or negative linear dependence of transitivity for sub- and super-Arrhenius cases, respectively. To first-order in reciprocal temperature, the transitivity function models deviations from linearity in Arrhenius plots as originally proposed by Aquilanti and Mundim: when deviations are increasingly larger, other phenomenological formulas, such as Vogel-Fulcher-Tammann, Nakamura-Takayanagi-Sato, and Aquilanti-Sanches-Coutinho-Carvalho are here rediscussed from the transitivity concept perspective and with in a general context. Emphasized is the interest of introducing into this context modifications to a very successful tool of theoretical kinetics, Eyring's Transition-State Theory: considering the behavior of the transitivity function at low temperatures, in order to describe deviation from Arrhenius behavior under the quantum tunneling regime, a "d-TST" formulation was previously introduced (Carvalho-Silva et al., 2017). In this paper, a special attention is dedicated to a derivation of the temperature dependence of viscosity, making explicit reference to feature of the transitivity function, which in this case generally exhibits a super-Arrhenius behavior. This is of relevance also for advantages of using the transitivity function for diffusion-controlled phenomena.Entities:
Keywords: Aquilanti-Mundim (AM) formula; Nakamura-Takayanagi-Sato (NTS) formula; Volgel-Fulcher-Tammann (VFT) formula; transitivity plot; viscosity and diffusion
Year: 2019 PMID: 31192196 PMCID: PMC6548831 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2019.00380
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.221
Figure 1The transitivity plane, vs. serves to give a geometrical meaning to the phenomenological parameters occurring in the study of non-linear Arrhenius plots. The Arrhenius behavior is given as corresponding to a line parallel to the β axis starting at and corresponds to a constant apparent activation energy E. The well-known double dagger notation was introduced by Eyring (Eyring, 1935; Glasstone et al., 1941). Deviations from Arrhenius behavior gives to the γ function straight line dependence at small β a direction forming the δ angle, which it is connected to the d parameter of the Aquilanti-Mundim (AM) law. At low temperatures as the “coldness” variable β increases, the transitivity function tends to characteristic ultra-cold limiting values: (i) for d < 0 (sub-Arrhenius) it tends to the Wigner limit and (ii) for d > 0 (super-Arrhenius), γ, namely the propensity for reaction to occur, vanishes in β†, γ(β†) = 0: the corresponding energy and temperature parameters are denoted by a single dagger, ε†and T†, respectively, as detailed below.
Figure 2The transitivity plot is presented for venerable and recent phenomenological reaction rate constant model to account for super-Arrhenius behavior (Arrhenius, AM, and VFT) and sub-Arrhenius behavior (Arrhenius, AM, ASCC, and NTS). The comparison of the behavior of the transitivity between AM and VFT is exhibited assuming in Equation (26).