- Elementary reaction
An elementary reaction is a
chemical reaction in which one or more of thechemical species which react directly to form products in a singlereaction step and with a singletransition state . [GoldBookRef | file = E02035 | title = elementary reaction]In a
unimolecular elementary reaction amolecule , A, dissociates or isomerises to form the products(s).:The rate of such a reaction, at constant temperature, is proportional to the concentration of the species A:In abimolecular elementary reaction, twoatom s,molecule s,ion s 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. :This rate expression can be derived from first principles by usingcollision theory .The rate expression for an elementary bimolecular reaction is sometimes referred to as theLaw of Mass Action as it was first proposed by Guldberg and Waage in 1864. An example of this type of reaction is acycloaddition reaction.Three chemical species must react simultaneously with each other in a trimolecular elementary reactions. It follows that such reactions are very rare.
Any chemical reaction can be broken down into a set of elementary reactions. It is not always possible to derive an overall
rate equation for non-trivial reaction schemes, but analytical solutions are possible in favourable cases, see, for example, the steady state approximation orMichaelis-Menten kinetics forenzyme -based reactions.Notes
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