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15: Chemical Kinetics II- Reaction Mechanisms

  • Page ID
    426501
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    • 15.1: A Mechanism is a Sequence of Elementary Reactions
      The mechanism of a reaction is a series of steps leading from the starting materials to the products. After each step, an intermediate is formed. The intermediate is short-lived, because it quickly undergoes another step to form the next intermediate. These simple steps are called elementary reactions. Because an overall reaction is composed of a series of elementary reaction, the overall rate of the reaction is somehow dependent on the rates of those smaller reactions.
    • 15.2: The Steady-State Approximation
      When a reaction mechanism has several steps of comparable rates, the rate-determining step is often not obvious. However, there is an intermediate in some of the steps. An intermediate is a species that is neither one of the reactants, nor one of the products. The steady-state approximation is a method used to derive a rate law. The method is based on the assumption that one intermediate in the reaction mechanism is consumed as quickly as it is generated. Its concentration remains the same in a
    • 15.3: Rate Laws Do Not Imply Unique Mechanism
      It is standard practice to develop a multi-step reaction mechanism from the experimentally derived rate law. The fact that a mechanism consistent with the rate law has been proposed does not preclude the possibility that the reaction proceeds according to a different mechanism. Thus, it is usual practice to carry out further experiments, such as trapping reaction intermediates, to gain enough evidence to accept one of the possible valid mechanisms.
    • 15.4: The Lindemann Mechanism
      The Lindemann mechanism was one of the first attempts to understand unimolecular reactions. Lindemann mechanisms have been used to model gas phase decomposition reactions. Although the net formula for a decomposition may appear to be first-order (unimolecular) in the reactant, a Lindemann mechanism may show that the reaction is actually second-order (bimolecular).
    • 15.5: Some Reaction Mechanisms Involve Chain Reactions
      Chain reactions usually consist of many repeating elementary steps, each of which has a chain carrier. Once started, chain reactions continue until the reactants are exhausted. Fire and explosions are some of the phenomena associated with chain reactions. The chain carriers are some intermediates that appear in the repeating elementary steps. These are usually free radicals.
    • 15.6: A Catalyst Affects the Mechanism and Activation Energy
      Homogeneous catalysis refers to reactions in which the catalyst is in solution with at least one of the reactants whereas heterogeneous catalysis refers to reactions in which the catalyst is present in a different phase, usually as a solid, than the reactants.
    • 15.7: The Michaelis-Menten Mechanism for Enzyme Catalysis
      Leonor Michaelis and Maude Menten proposed the following reaction mechanism for enzymatic reactions.  In the first step, the substrate binds to the active site of the enzyme. In the second step, the substrate is converted into the product and released from the substrate.


    15: Chemical Kinetics II- Reaction Mechanisms is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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