What is a reaction mechanism?

A series of elementary steps showing how a reaction occurs at the molecular level.

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What is a reaction mechanism?

A series of elementary steps showing how a reaction occurs at the molecular level.

Define an elementary step.

A single molecular event (e.g., collision, bond breaking/forming).

What are intermediates?

Species produced in one step and consumed in a later step; they don't appear in the overall reaction.

What are catalysts?

Species that speed up a reaction but are not consumed in the overall reaction; they appear in reactants and products.

Define the rate-determining step.

The slowest step in a reaction mechanism; it determines the overall reaction rate.

What is the steady-state approximation?

The assumption that the concentration of intermediates remains constant because their rate of formation equals their rate of consumption.

What are the differences between intermediates and catalysts?

Intermediates: Produced then consumed, don't appear in overall reaction. | Catalysts: Used then regenerated, appear in reactants and products.

What is the effect of the rate-determining step on the overall reaction rate?

The rate-determining step limits the overall reaction rate.

What is the effect of a fast and reversible first step on determining the rate law?

The slow step's rate law will often include intermediates, requiring the use of the steady-state approximation to express the rate law in terms of reactants.