WordNet
- (mechanics) the equal and opposite force that is produced when any force is applied to a body; "every action has an equal and opposite reaction"
- a response that reveals a persons feelings or attitude; "he was pleased by the audiences reaction to his performance"; "John feared his mothers reaction when she saw the broken lamp"
- a bodily process occurring due to the effect of some antecedent stimulus or agent; "a bad reaction to the medicine"; "his responses have slowed with age" (同)response
- doing something in opposition to another way of doing it that you dont like; "his style of painting was a reaction against cubism"
- an idea evoked by some experience; "his reaction to the news was to start planning what to do"
- extreme conservatism in political or social matters; "the forces of reaction carried the election"
- of or pertaining to or characteristic of elementary school or elementary education; "the elementary grades"; "elementary teachers"
- of or being the essential or basic part; "an elementary need for love and nurturing" (同)elemental, primary
- easy and not involved or complicated; "an elementary problem in statistics"; "elementary, my dear Watson"; "a simple game"; "found an uncomplicated solution to the problem" (同)simple, uncomplicated, unproblematic
PrepTutorEJDIC
- {名}(…に対する)『反応』《+『to』+『名』》 / 〈U〉(…に対する)(政治的・社会的な)『反動』,逆コース《+『against』+『名』》 / 〈U〉〈C〉化学反応,化学変化 / 〈U〉〈C〉(物理学で)反作用
- 『初歩の』,基礎の
Wikipedia preview
出典(authority):フリー百科事典『ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』「2015/09/04 11:44:03」(JST)
[Wiki en表示]
An elementary reaction is a chemical reaction in which one or more of the chemical species react directly to form products in a single reaction step and with a single transition state.[1] An apparent ("operational") reaction may be in fact stepwise reactions, i.e. a complicated sequence of chemical reactions, with reaction intermediates of variable lifetimes.
In a unimolecular elementary reaction, a molecule A dissociates or isomerises to form the products(s)
At constant temperature, the rate of such a reaction is proportional to the concentration of the species A
In a bimolecular elementary reaction, two atoms, molecules, ions or radicals, A and B, react together to form the product(s)
The rate of such a reaction, at constant temperature, is proportional to the product of the concentrations of the species A and B
The rate expression for an elementary bimolecular reaction is sometimes referred to as the Law of Mass Action as it was first proposed by Guldberg and Waage in 1864. An example of this type of reaction is a cycloaddition reaction. This rate expression can be derived from first principles by using collision theory for ideal gases. For the case of dilute fluids equivalent results have been obtained from simple probabilistic arguments.[2]
According to collision theory the probability of three chemical species reacting simultaneously with each other in a intermolecular elementary reactions is negligible. Hence such termolecular reactions are commonly referred as non-elementary reactions and can be broken down into a more fundamental set of bimolecular reactions,[3][4] in agreement with the law of mass action. However it is not always possible to derive overall reaction schemes but solutions based on rate equations are possible in terms of steady-state or Michaelis-Menten approximations.
Notes
- ^ IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book") (1997). Online corrected version: (2006–) "elementary reaction".
- ^ Gillespie, D.T., A diffusional bimolecular propensity function, The Journal of Chemical Physics 131, 164109 (2009)
- ^ Cook, GB and Gray, P. and Knapp, DG and Scott, SK, Bimolecular routes to cubic autocatalysis, The Journal of Physical Chemistry 93, 2749--2755 (1989)
- ^ Aris, R. and Gray, P. and Scott, SK, Modelling cubic autocatalysis by successive bimolecular steps, Chemical Engineering Science 43', 207--211 (1988)
Basic reaction mechanisms
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Nucleophilic substitutions |
- Unimolecular nucleophilic substitution (SN1)
- Bimolecular nucleophilic substitution (SN2)
- Nucleophilic aromatic substitution (SNAr)
- Nucleophilic internal substitution (SNi)
- Nucleophilic acyl substitution
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Elimination reactions |
- Unimolecular elimination (E1)
- E1cB-elimination reaction
- Bimolecular elimination (E2)
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Addition reactions |
- Electrophilic addition
- Nucleophilic addition
- Free-radical addition
- Cycloaddition
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Related topics |
- Elementary reaction
- Molecularity
- Stereochemistry
- Catalysis
- Collision theory
- Solvent effects
- Arrow pushing
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Chemical kinetics |
- Rate equation
- Rate-determining step
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UpToDate Contents
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English Journal
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- Wang C1, Zhang Y2, Zhang Y1, Xu P1, Feng C1, Chen T1, Guo T1, Yang F1, Wang Q3, Wang J1, Shi M1, Fan L4, Chen S5.
- ACS applied materials & interfaces.ACS Appl Mater Interfaces.2018 Mar 8. doi: 10.1021/acsami.7b19727. [Epub ahead of print]
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Japanese Journal
- Mixing and Fluid Dynamics Effects in Particle Precipitation Processes
- Kinetic Analysis of Decomposition of Ammonia over Nickel and Ruthenium Catalysts
- Environmentally friendly method to grow wide-bandgap semiconductor aluminum nitride crystals: Elementary source vapor phase epitaxy.
Related Links
- An elementary reaction is a chemical reaction in which one or more of the chemical species react directly to form products in a single reaction step and with a single transition state. [1] An apparent ("operational") reaction may be in ...
- Introduction Elementary reactions add up to complex reactions; non-elementary reactions can be described by multiple elementary reaction steps. A set of elementary reactions comprises a reaction mechanism, which predicts the ...
Related Pictures
★リンクテーブル★
[★]
- 英
- elementary reaction
- 関
- 反応速度
[★]
- 関
- basal、bases、basic、basis、element、factor、fundamentals
[★]
- 関
- react、respond、response、responsive