Steady state (chemistry)


In chemistry, a steady state is a situation in which all state variables are constant in spite of ongoing processes that strive to change them. For an entire system to be at steady state, i.e. for all state variables of a system to be constant, there must be a flow through the system. A simple example of such a system is the case of a bathtub with the tap running but with the drain unplugged: after a certain time, the water flows in and out at the same rate, so the water level stabilizes and the system is in a steady state.
The steady state concept is different from chemical equilibrium. Although both may create a situation where a concentration does not change, in a system at chemical equilibrium, the net reaction rate is zero, while no such limitation exists in the steady state concept. Indeed, there does not have to be a reaction at all for a steady state to develop.
The term steady state is also used to describe a situation where some, but not all, of the state variables of a system are constant. For such a steady state to develop, the system does not have to be a flow system. Therefore, such a steady state can develop in a closed system where a series of chemical reactions take place. Literature in chemical kinetics usually refers to this case, calling it steady state approximation.
In simple systems the steady state is approached by state variables gradually decreasing or increasing until they reach their steady state value. In more complex systems state variable might fluctuate around the theoretical steady state either forever or gradually coming closer and closer. It theoretically takes an infinite time to reach steady state, just as it takes an infinite time to reach chemical equilibrium.
Both concepts are, however, frequently used approximations because of the substantial mathematical simplifications these concepts offer. Whether or not these concepts can be used depends on the error the underlying assumptions introduce. So, even though a steady state, from a theoretical point of view, requires constant drivers, the error introduced by assuming steady state for a system with non-constant drivers may be negligible if the steady state is approached fast enough.

Steady state approximation in chemical kinetics

The steady state approximation, occasionally called the stationary-state approximation, involves setting the rate of change of a reaction intermediate in a reaction mechanism equal to zero so that the kinetic equations can be simplified by setting the rate of formation of the intermediate equal to the rate of its destruction.
In practice it is sufficient that the rates of formation and destruction are approximately equal, which means that the net rate of variation of the concentration of the intermediate is small compared to the formation and destruction, and the concentration of the intermediate varies only slowly.
Its use facilitates the resolution of the differential equations that arise from rate equations, which lack an analytical solution for most mechanisms beyond the most simple ones. The steady state approximation is applied, for example in Michaelis-Menten kinetics.
As an example, the steady state approximation will be applied to two consecutive, irreversible, homogeneous first order reactions in a closed system. This model corresponds, for example, to a series of nuclear decompositions like ^U -> ^Np -> ^Pu\! .
If the rate constants for the following reaction are and ; A -> B -> C , combining the rate equations with a mass balance for the system yields three coupled differential equations:

Reaction rates

For species A:
For species B:,
Here the first term represents the formation of B by the first step A -> B, whose rate depends on the initial reactant A. The second term represents the consumption of B by the second step B -> C, whose rate depends on B as the reactant in that step.
For species C:, the rate of formation of C by the second step.

Analytical solutions

The analytical solutions for these equations are:

Steady state

If the steady state approximation is applied, then the derivative of the concentration of the intermediate is set to zero. This reduces the second differential equation to an algebraic equation which is much easier to solve.
Therefore,, so that .

Validity

The analytical and approximated solutions should now be compared in order to decide when it is valid to use the steady state approximation. The analytical solution transforms into the approximate one when, because then and. Therefore, it is valid to apply the steady state approximation only if the second reaction is much faster than the first one, because that means that the intermediate forms slowly and reacts readily so its concentration stays low.
The graphs show concentrations of A, B and C in two cases, calculated from the analytical solution.
When the first reaction is faster it is not valid to assume that the variation of is very small, because is neither low or close to constant: first A transforms into B rapidly and B accumulates because it disappears slowly. As the concentration of A decreases its rate of transformation decreases, at the same time the rate of reaction of B into C increases as more B is formed, so a maximum is reached when.
From then on the concentration of B decreases.
When the second reaction is faster, after a short induction period, concentration of B remains low because its rate of formation and disappearance are almost equal and the steady state approximation can be used.
The equilibrium approximation can be used sometimes in chemical kinetics to yield similar results to the steady state approximation. It consists in assuming that the intermediate arrives rapidly at chemical equilibrium with the reactants. For example, Michaelis-Menten kinetics can be derived assuming equilibrium instead of steady state. Normally the requirements for applying the steady state approximation are laxer: the concentration of the intermediate is only needed to be low and more or less constant but it is not needed to be at equilibrium.